Woman says her photos were stolen to spread fake viral stories about her uncle's death on COVID-19


Similar allegations can be found on Facebook in the death certificate which is manipulated to increase the number of deaths.

These are often incorporated into the conspiracy theories of government control and compulsory vaccination.

Requests are often assigned to friends or family members, usually anonymous, but sometimes also have names such as "Uncle David".

For data verifiers and social media companies, this type of misinformation is particularly difficult since it is impossible to know the exact circumstances of each death.

The Full Fact fact-finding site said, "If you don't know who the real source is, it's difficult to determine whether it's true or false." "If there is no information on the named source, think twice."

But we do know that the woman in these photos said that she had no uncle named David, nor did she say the words attributed to her, and she shared thousands of times.

Heaven32 News verified the identity of Sarah-Louise Cooper with a video call. During the video call, she showed her unique tattoo and a Springer spaniel named Bailey, a profile picture used by the person on her "Sara Faith" account. There is a feature

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