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James McManagan

Fake news article targets Foreign Minister Penny Wong in crypto scam

The bogus web page is quite convincing, though there are several telltale signs. (Facebook/AAP)

What was claimed

Penny Wong is being sued for spruiking an investment platform in an interview.

Our verdict

False. The article making the claim is fake and Ms Wong has not promoted such a platform.

AAP FACTCHECK – Foreign Minister Penny Wong is not being sued for spruiking an investment platform in an interview on an Australian TV show, despite claims on social media.

Ms Wong made no such statement nor did she give any such interview.

The claim has been shared in a Facebook post linking to an interview transcript on a suspicious webpage that resembles a news.com.au article.

Facebook post linking to a fake News Corp article about Penny Wong
Despite linking to a fake news.com.au article, the Facebook link shows competitor Nine's logo.

“Bank of Australia is suing Penny Wong for what she said on live TV,” the post’s caption reads.

The linked article claims the senator is being sued by the non-existent “Bank of Australia” for spruiking cryptocurrency software in a TV interview.

It also includes a purported transcript of Ms Wong’s supposed interview.

Several clues indicate the supposed news.com.au article and its host webpage are fakes.

The URL is different to the news.com.au website, with the domain name “touxan.top” and the unlikely word path “nestory-irankunda-loaned-grasshopper-club-zurich-bayern-munich”.

Pic of Penny Wong added to a screenshot of The Cheap Seats.
An image within the fake article has clearly been digitally altered to add Penny Wong.

The navigation bar links at the top of the page aren’t clickable (despite the cursor changing to a hand when hovering) and the time doesn't change.

It also carries the byline of Adam Kohler, who is a veteran ABC finance correspondent and doesn’t write for news.com.au.

AAP FactCheck could find no record of Ms Wong ever endorsing any cryptocurrency platforms.

And while there is a bank named Bank Australia (no “of”), and the country’s central bank is called the Reserve Bank of Australia, no entity named “Bank of Australia” specifically exists.

The Verdict

False – The claim is inaccurate.

AAP FactCheck is an accredited member of the International Fact-Checking Network. To keep up with our latest fact checks, follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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