1 Answer

0 like 0 dislike
by Novice (520 points)
selected by
 
Best answer

The main claim in the article appears to be true, though it is important to emphasize the 'could be' section of the claim. Background research confirms all of the supporting evidence that Marshall Cohen presents in this article. Cohen is a distinguished reporter, with a long history of journalism, receiving awards from the Radio & Television Correspondents' Association, the Society of Professional Journalists, as well as an Emmy while at CBS News. All quotes within the article, such as the quote from Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, correspond with the primary sources [interviews, etc.] and appear frequently in other related articles within different news sources. The information Cohen offers, as well as his conclusion that Musk's actions are "immediately drawing scrutiny from election law experts who said the sweepstakes could violate laws against paying people to register," corroborate with in many other articles on the same topic, from unbiased and accountable sources such as AP News and NBC. Finally, I double-checked the actual legalese Cohen references through Cornells Legal Information Institute, which matches Cohens quotation: "Federal law makes it a crime for anyone who 'pays or offers to pay or accepts payment either for registration to vote or for voting.'"

Supplemental Resources Used:

True

Community Rules


Be respectful.

There is bound to be disagreement on a site about misinformation. Assume best intentions on everyone's part.

If you are new to factchecking, take some time to learn about it. "How to Factcheck" has some resources for getting started. Even if you disagree with these materials, they'll help you understand the language of this community better.

News Detective is for uncovering misinformation and rumors. This is not a general interest question-answer site for things someone could Google.

Posting

The title is the "main claim" that you're trying to factcheck.

Example:
Factcheck This: Birds don't exist

If possible, LINK TO to the place you saw the claim.

Answering

LINK TO YOUR EVIDENCE or otherwise explain the source ("I called this person, I found it in this book, etc.")

But don't just drop a link. Give an explanation, copy and paste the relevant information, etc.

News Detective is not responsible for anything anyone posts on the platform.
...