The Facts
The Twitter account, Rogue WH Snr Advisor, known by @roguesnradvisor, claims to be from a member of the Trump administration.
The tweet in question is in reference to former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani’s appearance in the movie “Borat 2,” which is set to be released October 23.
Giuliani fell for a prank involving a young woman posing as a reporter, a part of Sacha Baron Cohen’s sting. After a fake interview, which was staged to look real to Giuliani, the young woman invited Giuliani back to her hotel room for drinks and Giuliani accepted. The incident came about as Giuliani was supposedly adjusting his clothes by “fiddling with his untucked shirt and reaching in to his trousers” while laying back on the bed after the young woman removed his microphone, according to The Guardian.
Giuliani claimed on Twitter that the “Borat video is a complete fabrication.”
Media Matters for America Editor Parker Molloy tweeted, “No, Trump this is not a deleted Trump tweet. Please stop falling for this stuff.”
Molloy also tweeted a link to ProPublica.org’s page where records of Trump’s deleted tweets are kept. There is no record of the tweet on the site or that it was ever published or deleted by Trump.
Rogue WH Snr Advisor is known for its cons and spreading of fake news. In July, the account revealed its identity as “James Maxwell Trump,” the fake illegitimate son of Donald Trump and former girlfriend of Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell. The account also posted a picture of “Maxwell Trump’s” birth certificate that was proved to be “clearly false” through a quick Google search, according to The Lucretia Report.
The report said: “It takes only a simple Google image search for ‘New York Birth Certificate’ to find the base image of his doctored photo. With that search we find that the third image is for a ‘Tara Ann Uzamere’ and shows the same document number, the same City Registrar signature twelve years apart, and the same wear and tear on the edge.”
The Ruling
False. The supposed deleted Trump tweet posted by @roguesnradvisor is fake. There is no evidence Trump ever posted the tweet.