FactCheck

Trump’s Inaccurate Anecdote on ‘Right to Repair’ Cars

President Donald Trump waded into the contentious “right to repair” your own auto debate, but he recounted a wildly inaccurate anecdote to bolster his support for consumers.

According to Trump, in remarks on June 4, “They gave a man seven years in jail, actually, because he fixed his own car.”

The following day, at a roundtable on agriculture in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, the president again referenced the case.

“I mean, they actually have, the Democrats, a restriction that if you get caught fixing your tractor, they bring you to jail,” Trump said. “You know that? Do you know that I pardoned a man last week who was sentenced to seven years in jail because he got caught fixing his car or his truck? I said — I like to always say, ‘What did he do?’ ‘Sir, he was fixing his truck.’ I said, ‘How long is he getting?’ ‘Seven years.’ I said, ‘Say it again.’ It’s the first time I’ve ever heard — like two weeks ago. I gave him a pardon because he had to go to jail because he was fixing his tractor or his truck. Can you believe it?”

The White House did not respond to our request for backup, but Trump appears to be referring to his Nov. 7 pardon of Troy Lake, a Wyoming diesel mechanic who served seven months of a one-year sentence — not seven years — after pleading guilty to violating the Clean Air Act by disabling emissions monitoring systems on hundreds of heavy-duty commercial trucks. (No other pardon in Trump’s second term fits the description.)

According to a Dec. 9, 2024, news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado, Lake and his company, Elite Diesel Service Inc., instructed company employees “to disable the computerized on-board diagnostic (OBD) systems on at least 344 heavy-duty commercial trucks. OBDs are required under the Clean Air Act to monitor emissions control hardware on vehicles to ensure that they are functioning properly.”

There were also eight co-conspirators, the release stated, who “hired Elite and Lake to manipulate the OBDs so that the OBDs would not detect the malfunctions.” Those co-conspirators, who cooperated with the investigators, were fined more than $500,000 in total.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office said Lake violated the Clean Air Act’s prohibition against tampering with monitoring devices.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, emissions control devices “are critical to maintaining air quality, and when these controls are disabled, the increase in excess tailpipe pollution is significant. A study of the effects of tampering with these 344 trucks showed that the conspirators in this case collectively caused an illegal increase in pollutants of at least 1,300 tons of excess nitrogen oxides, 30 tons of excess non-methane hydrocarbons, 600 tons of excess carbon monoxide, and 30 tons of excess particulate matter.”

“For years, the defendants led a large-scale conspiracy designed to violate the Clean Air Act by defeating emissions control equipment on hundreds of heavy-duty commercial trucks,” Special Agent in Charge Lance Ehrig of the Environmental Protection Agency’s Criminal Investigation Division in Colorado said at the time. “The actions by the defendants and their co-conspirators directly resulted in a significant increase in excess pollution, which diminished air quality and further placed vulnerable populations at risk of developing adverse health conditions.”

Lake maintained he was merely trying to spare small businesses from expensive and unnecessary repair bills.

“I didn’t want to be Robin Hood. I just felt that it was wrong for what the government was doing to American people that wanted to work,” Lake told Fox News on Oct. 27.

“All of us true Americans aren’t opposed against clean air. We want clean air,” Lake told Wyoming’s Oil City News in November. “But my problem with the deal was I just started seeing more and more — especially owner-operators or small companies — going out of business or struggling to keep this stuff running. It cost them $20,000 to fix it and I was charging them $2,500 or $2,800 to delete it and never have that problem again.”

Lake’s case caught the attention of Republican Sen. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, who petitioned the president in October for a pardon, casting Lake’s conviction as an example of the Biden administration’s “overreach into the daily lives of hardworking Americans in communities across the west.”

That same month, Lummis introduced the Diesel Truck Liberation Act, which would prohibit the federal government from “requiring manufacturers to install or maintain emissions control devices or onboard diagnostic systems” and remove “EPA authority to enforce Clean Air Act requirements related to vehicle emissions controls.” It would also bar the civil or criminal prosecution of those who violate “federal law for tampering or improving emissions equipment.” The bill has not made it out of committee.

On Jan. 21, the Department of Justice Environment and Natural Resource Division announced via X that it would no longer criminally prosecute cases such as Lake’s.

“Today, [the Justice Department] is exercising its enforcement discretion to no longer pursue criminal charges under the Clean Air Act based on allegations of tampering with onboard diagnostic devices in motor vehicles,” the post said. “DOJ is committed to sound enforcement principles, efficient use of government resources, and avoiding overcriminalization of federal environmental law.”

The post noted, however, that DOJ would “still pursue civil enforcement for these violations when appropriate.”

The same day as that DOJ announcement, the government dropped its case against Tracy Coiteux, a Washington woman who had appealed a 2024 conviction for tampering with diesel trucks’ emissions monitoring systems.

On Feb. 12 — two weeks before Lake was Lummis’ guest at the State of the Union Address — Trump also pardoned Lake’s company, Elite Diesel Services Inc., which was sentenced to five years of probation at the same time Lake was sentenced. Trump’s pardon forgives $50,000 worth of fines levied against the company.

No matter what one thinks about Lake’s case, he was not sentenced to “seven years in jail … because he fixed his own car,” as Trump framed it.

Right to Repair

Moreover, the case is only tangentially related to the so-called “right to repair” debate to which Trump tied it.

“We had the auto industry in yesterday,” Trump said in remarks on June 4 about a meeting he had that included the heads of Ford, General Motors and Penske Corporation. “They don’t want people to fix their car. I said, that’s strange, I’ve never heard of that. They have a thing to — nobody’s allowed to fix their car. They gave a man seven years in jail, actually, because he fixed his own car.

“Can you believe it?” Trump asked. “They want a bill that prohibits people from fixing. So if you’re mechanically inclined — you know, I grew up. I went to school with some guys; they were, in some cases, horrible students, but they could fix an engine blindfolded. … But they were great. And so there’s a move on to stop people from fixing their car. I didn’t understand it.”

Photo by bung / stock.adobe.com

The following day in Wisconsin, Trump asked local farmers at a roundtable, “Do you like it, the right to repair?

“It was a little strange,” Trump said. “I mean, some of you are better mechanics than the people at John Deere. … Let’s say you have a tractor, it’s broken and you know exactly how to fix it. You wouldn’t be too happy about being mandated to bring the tractor back to John Deere or wherever you got it, right? You’d like to fix it.

“I mean, they actually have, the Democrats, a restriction that if you get caught fixing your tractor, they bring you to jail. You know that? Do you know that I pardoned a man last week who was sentenced to seven years in jail because he got caught fixing his car or his truck?”

Again, Lake was not prosecuted for simply “fixing his car or his truck.”

The issue of “right to repair” is contentious and also more complicated than Trump’s description suggests.

As the National Conference of State Legislatures explains, “Right to repair legislation is directed at the ability of consumers to repair their own products instead of going back to the original manufacturer for service.”

“In the context of the aftermarket, it refers to consumers’ ability to select who repairs and/or maintains their motor vehicles,” the Congressional Research Service said in a 2024 report on the subject.

While, broadly, car buyers have the right to fix their own autos, or to take them to a repair shop of their choice (rather than to the dealer), a political debate has arisen over the “telematics” inside cars, “the wireless transmission of data to and from vehicles and data centers hosted by the vehicle manufacturers,” the CRS report said.

The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, a trade group representing most of the major auto manufacturers, argued in 2023 that public access to telematics would “create privacy and cybersecurity risks.”

As Todd Spangler, Washington correspondent for the Detroit Free Press, wrote on June 8, “The conflict comes down to who has the proprietary right to all that know-how, intellectual property and access: the manufacturer, whose business model may rely on it, or the owner, who buys it.”

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Trump Exaggerates Previous Spending on Reflecting Pool

The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool began filling with water on June 4 following maintenance work that President Donald Trump called a “big project.” In late May, Trump claimed that “the Biden administration and the Obama administration spent hundreds of millions of dollars trying to get it to work, and they failed,” adding that his administration was spending “$10 million, maybe, $12 million.”

But that exaggerates the amount spent by previous administrations. We could find no record of any major work done during former President Joe Biden’s term, and the total spent for an overhaul of the pool during former President Barack Obama’s term was about $35 million.

According to the publicly available federal contract, the Trump administration has spent about $14 million to repaint and seal the bottom of the pool, which has a history of leaks.

The pool was completely refilled with water by June 9, as shown in a PBS News timelapse of the progress.

A person takes a photo near the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on June 9. Photo by Anna Rose Layden via Getty Images.

Trump made his comments about prior work on the Reflecting Pool in a May 27 Cabinet meeting. “It’s embarrassing,” he said of the condition of the pool. “It was filthy, dirty. It was Biden. And they spent, between the two of them, they spent hundreds of millions of dollars trying to fix this thing. Now, when Biden — when Obama did it, he spent way over $100 million.” 

The work done by the current administration, Trump said, included sandblasting the surface and painting it blue. “We made the surface as good as it can be and we’re now covering it with the most beautiful blue, very thick,” he said. “You think of it as a very sophisticated form of rubber, no leaks, no problems. And it’s beautiful. It’s called American Flag blue. That was the color we chose.”

We asked the National Park Service for details about the scope of the recent work, but we didn’t get a response. Trump has mentioned repeatedly that the pool was being repainted, which is reflected in the publicly available information about the contract. Based on government documents it obtained, the New York Times reported that the scope of work also involves repairs to some of the leaking crevices between the concrete slabs at the bottom of the pool.

Extensive work to rebuild the pool started in 2010 and concluded in 2012 during the Obama administration. That project used funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act — stimulus legislation enacted in response to the Great Recession — to essentially replace the original pool that was first built in the early 1920s.

“The old reflecting pool was built with an asphalt and tile bottom on poorly supported soil consisting primarily of marshes,” one of the companies that worked on that project had written at the time, explaining that the pool had sunk a foot into the ground over time.

That project also switched the source of the water from the city’s municipal system to the nearby Tidal Basin fed by the Potomac River, with an ozone water filtration system, according to the National Park Service. There was an unexpected amount of algae when the new pool first opened, according to a Washington Post report at the time, which said that the ozone levels in the filtration system needed adjustment.

Some maintenance issues over the years — such as a broken water line in 2019, according to the National Park Service — led to water quality issues in the pool that required repair.

During the May Cabinet meeting, Trump referred to the change in the water source during the 2012 project, saying, “the water from the Potomac was not suitable for this, to put it mildly. It was disgusting what happened.” But we couldn’t find any information indicating that the source of the water for the pool has changed under Trump. We asked the White House, the Interior Department and the NPS about the water source, but we didn’t get a response.

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FactChecking Trump’s Contentious ‘Meet the Press’ Interview

President Donald Trump walked out of a sit-down interview with Kristen Welker on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” That happened after he made, or repeated, a number of false and unsupported claims — some of which Welker pushed back on.

  • Trump seized on the slow vote-counting procedures in California to claim, without evidence, that its recent primary election was “rigged.”
  • The president falsely claimed that he “didn’t guarantee” that he’d keep the U.S. out of “new wars” in his second term. There are several examples of him making such a promise in 2024.
  • He claimed that Iran was “very close to having a nuclear weapon” under a multilateral agreement negotiated by President Barack Obama’s administration and wrongly said the country “got all of this uranium during Obama.” Arms control experts say Iran accelerated its uranium enrichment program after Trump withdrew from the deal.
  • The president also said that if he didn’t launch airstrikes against Iran in June 2025, the country would “right now have a nuclear weapon, and it could be that half of the world would be eradicated already.” That assessment is at odds with reports from the International Atomic Energy Agency and the U.S. Intelligence Community, which said in March 2025 that “Iran is not building a nuclear weapon.”
  • He provided no support for his claim that Jan. 6 rioters were “ushered into” the Capitol by “FBI agents.” A 2024 watchdog report said that FBI agents arrived to assist law enforcement after rioters had already broken into the Capitol.
  • Trump repeated other claims we’ve written about before regarding gasoline prices, the economy under his presidencies and construction of factories.

The interview was recorded on June 5 and aired two days later.

No Evidence of ‘Rigged’ California Elections

Trump walked out of the interview after Welker repeatedly asked him to provide evidence for his claims that the California elections were “rigged.”

The “evidence” Trump cited, however — that California had not finished counting votes several days after a June 2 primary election — is not evidence at all.

It does take California longer than other states to count ballots, but that’s because the vast majority of votes are cast via mail-in ballots, which counties send to all active registered voters. Mail-in ballots are accepted so long as they are “postmarked on or before election day” and received “no later than seven days after election day,” according to state law. That alone causes some delay.

“California has the largest number of registered voters in the nation—more than 23 million registered voters,” according to California Secretary of State Shirley Weber’s website. “Ensuring that all valid votes cast by eligible voters are accurately processed and counted takes time.”

California is also one of 32 states that require signature verification for mail-in ballots, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. But California also allows voters to “cure” their ballot if a problem arises in signature-matching.

“If a signature is missing or does not compare to the signature on file, state law requires county elections officials to reach out to voters to verify their signature to ensure that their ballot can be counted,” the California secretary of state website states. “By law, and for most elections, voters are allowed to verify their signature up to eight days before the county certifies their results. These processes ensure that all valid votes cast by eligible voters can be counted.”

On election night, California shares “semi-official” tallies of the votes cast in-person at the polls on Election Day, the early votes cast in person, and mail-in ballots received and processed prior to Election Day. But in close elections, that’s often not enough for election prognosticators to “call” a race for the winners.

The top two vote-getters in the primary for both governor and Los Angeles mayor — regardless of party — square off in the general election. As of the morning of June 9, the Associated Press had projected Democratic gubernatorial candidate Xavier Becerra would advance to the general election, but it is yet to be determined whether he will face Republican Steve Hilton or Democrat Tom Steyer. In the Los Angeles mayoral election, the Associated Press projected a day after the election that incumbent Karen Bass will be on the November general election ballot. But it wasn’t until June 8 that the AP projected Nithya Raman, a city councilwoman, would grab the second spot over reality TV star Spencer Pratt.

In his “Meet the Press” interview, Trump revived his false and unproven claims that the 2020 election was “rigged” and “dirty.”

Welker noted that “you’ve never presented evidence” that the 2020 election was “rigged.”

“It’s happening right now in California,” Trump said. “Right now, it’s, look at what’s happening in California.”

“Where’s the evidence to that?” Welker asked, adding that “the Republicans are doing well in California.”

“In California, it’s, no they’re not,” Trump said. “They’re dropping fast because it’s a rigged election. Let me tell you, it’s four days and they aren’t even close to coming up with the —”

Welker pushed back, saying, “That’s how they count the votes in California.”

“Do you know why they’re doing that? Because they’re cheating on the election,” Trump said.

“Do you have evidence to support that?” Welker said.

“All I have to do is look,” Trump responded.

“But that’s not evidence,” Welker said.

“And I listen. And I listen to people,” Trump said.

“But sir, that’s not evidence,” Welker said.

“We’re like a third world country,” Trump said. “Your elections are crooked and you’re crooked, and ‘Meet the Press’ is crooked. And so is ABC and CBS and CNN. You’re a one-sided crooked network. Sorry. Let’s call it quits because I’ve had enough. Thank you, darling. Have a good time.”

The unfounded claim about California was not new for Trump, who posted on Truth Social on June 4, two days after California’s election, “There’s BIG cheating by the Dumocrats in California. Votes are all tied up. May not be in for weeks. Under investigation by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles. Why the vote counting DELAY???”

The following day, Bilal “Bill” Essayli, first assistant U.S. attorney for the Central District of California, posted on X that his office “has multiple election fraud investigations underway” in coordination with the FBI in Los Angeles. “We will follow the evidence wherever it leads and prosecute any violations of federal election law to the fullest extent,” Essayli wrote.

No further details about the investigations were provided.

Essayli also lambasted the state’s “[u]niversal vote-by-mail with no voter ID requirements,” which he said “creates conditions where fraud can go undetected and unpunished, eroding public confidence.”

He added that the U.S. attorney’s office would be working with the Department of Justice’s civil rights division “to conduct a comprehensive audit of California’s voter rolls.”

A post from California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s press office on June 4 warned, “There is a lot of misinformation floating around about California’s election — including from the President.” The post linked to a CNN explanation of why it takes California so long to count ballots.

“And yes, for the record: we wish the votes were counted faster, too,” the governor’s press office post concluded.

‘No New Wars’

During an exchange about the Iran conflict, Trump repeatedly denied — wrongly — that he ever promised there would be “no new wars” in a second Trump term.

“One of your consistent campaign promises was no new wars, going all the way back to 2015,” Welker said, before asking the president, “Did you break that promise to the American people?” In response, Trump said, “No,” then he added: “I had to stop a country, very powerful, very dangerous country, from having a nuclear weapon because they’d use it.”

When Welker continued to press the issue, asking Trump “what changed” to make him go back on his promise to keep the U.S. out of “new wars,” he said, “First of all, I didn’t guarantee no war. Why would I have built the strongest military in the world?”

Later in the interview, Trump again said that he had made no such guarantee. “When you say I promised, I didn’t promise anything,” he said. “I don’t like these endless wars. This is not an endless war. We’ve been doing this for three months.”

Several times during his 2024 campaign, Trump was specific about wanting to “end” or keep the U.S. out of “endless” foreign wars. For example, during a Wisconsin campaign rally in September 2024, he said: “I will expel the warmongers from our national security state and carry out a much-needed cleanup of the military industrial complex to stop the war profiteering and to put always America first. … So, we’re going to end these endless wars, endless wars. They never stop. You ever see these wars? They’re going for 14 years, 20 years.”

However, to Welker’s point, there also were many times when Trump said that there would be no U.S.-involved wars at all in a second Trump administration.

When accepting the GOP nomination for president in July 2024, Trump said, “With our victory in November, the years of war, weakness, and chaos will be over. I don’t have wars.”

The following month, at an August 2024 rally in Pennsylvania, he told the audience, ”Under Trump, we will have no more wars, no more disruptions, and we will have prosperity and peace for all.” A few days earlier, during a campaign speech in North Carolina, Trump said that “we will end the era of inflation, mayhem and misery” under the Biden administration by having “no more wars” and “no more disruptions.”

Then, while giving his election victory speech in November 2024, Trump said that his political opponents were wrong to say that he would be the one to start a war. “I’m not going to start a war. I’m going to stop wars,” he said.

But it was the U.S. and Israel that launched the airstrikes that began the fighting with Iran.

Iran Nuclear Capabilities

The president made several disputed and unsupported claims about Iran’s nuclear capabilities and the actions he and former President Barack Obama took.

Trump claimed that Iran was “very close to having a nuclear weapon twice.” The first time, he said, was under a 2015 deal with Iran negotiated by the Obama administration. Called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the agreement was signed by the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council — China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States — and Germany. In 2018, in Trump’s first term and two years after the JCPOA went into effect, Trump announced the U.S. would withdraw from the deal.

In the “Meet the Press” interview, Trump said the JCPOA was a “horrible deal. It was a path to them getting a nuclear weapon. They were very close to having a nuclear weapon. I terminated the deal.”

The deal put restrictions on Iran’s enrichment of uranium and required international inspections of the country’s nuclear facilities for 15 years. While there were critics of the agreement who said it didn’t go far enough, experts we interviewed disputed Trump’s claim that it was a “path” to Iran “getting a nuclear weapon.” In fact, they said, Iran accelerated its uranium enrichment program after Trump withdrew from the deal.

Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, a nonpartisan organization that provides analysis on arms control and national security issues, told us that the 2015 nuclear deal “established an array of limits on Iran’s uranium enrichment and uranium stockpiling” and a rigorous monitoring and verification program. After the Trump administration’s withdrawal, “Iran began to reconstitute its nuclear capabilities, including by deploying large numbers of advanced centrifuges and stockpiling” highly enriched uranium.

Laura Rockwood, senior fellow at the Vienna Center for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation who worked for the International Atomic Energy Agency for 28 years, told us: “Iran simply would not have been able to enrich to the point of possessing over 400 kg of 60% enriched uranium had the JCPOA remained in place.” That’s a reference to the amount of 60% enriched uranium Iran had before June 2025 airstrikes on the country’s nuclear program sites.

In July 2019, about a year after Trump announced the U.S. would withdraw from the Obama-era deal, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported that Iran had exceeded the deal’s limits on Iran’s stockpile of low-enriched uranium, and Iran’s foreign minister said the country would begin to enrich uranium beyond the low level needed for civilian nuclear power.

In the NBC News interview, Trump wrongly claimed that Iran “got all of this uranium during Obama.” When Welker said that Iran “escalated their development after the deal was ripped up,” Trump said that “they didn’t escalate anything.” That’s contrary to what arms control experts have said.

As we’ve explained before, to be weapons-grade, the 60% enriched uranium would need to be enriched to 90%.

The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation estimated that Trump’s withdrawal from JCPOA shortened the so-called “breakout time,” or the time Iran would need to produce weapons-grade uranium that could then be used for one bomb – if the country chose to do so. As of November 2024, the center estimated that the breakout time went from two to three months before the JCPOA to 12-plus months during the deal. After the U.S. withdrew from the agreement, the breakout time was reduced to just a couple of weeks.

To be clear, that doesn’t mean that Iran would have a nuclear weapon in a couple of weeks. Emma Sandifer, program coordinator at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, told us that once Iran had weapons-grade uranium, it “would then need to manufacture the rest of the weapon. This process would likely take much longer, perhaps months to a year.”  

Again, if Iran chose to do so. That brings us to another disputed claim by Trump. He said that Iran was close to having and potentially using a nuclear weapon before the June 2025 U.S. airstrikes. “If I didn’t go in there with the B2 bombers, they would right now have a nuclear weapon, and it could be that half of the world would be eradicated already,” Trump said.

The president’s view is at odds with the assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community — which is made up of 18 government intelligence agencies and departments — and the International Atomic Energy Agency.  

In late March 2025, the U.S. Intelligence Community assessed that “Iran is not building a nuclear weapon and that [Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali] Khamenei has not reauthorized the nuclear weapons program he suspended in 2003.” In a March 25 congressional hearing, then Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard reiterated that finding in her opening statement. Gabbard also said, “Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile is at its highest levels and is unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons.”

Similarly, a May 31, 2025, report from the IAEA said it “has no credible indications of an ongoing, undeclared structured nuclear programme” to develop nuclear weapons in Iran, but the group had concerns about “repeated statements by former high-level officials in Iran related to Iran having all capabilities to manufacture nuclear weapons.”

The agency said, “[T]he fact that Iran is the only non-nuclear-weapon State in the world that is producing and accumulating uranium enriched to 60% remains a matter of serious concern, which has drawn international attention given the potential proliferation implications.”

The Iranian nuclear program sites targeted by last June’s U.S. airstrikes were damaged, but not “obliterated,” as Trump put it, according to experts, who told us the bombings likely increased the so-called breakout time. The operation didn’t “remove or help account for 400 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent U-235 that Iran already had stockpiled,” Kimball said.

Trump has said he wants Iran to turn over its stockpile of enriched uranium as part of a peace deal to end the current U.S. military operation in the country.

Finally, Trump said that Obama sent a plane to Iran loaded with “$1.7 billion in cash, “adding that the administration “emptied out the banks” in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C., for this payment. As we’ve explained before, the $1.7 billion payment, made in 2016, settled a claim that Iran had filed against the U.S. in an international tribunal in The Hague. It concerned a decades-old dispute over Iran paying the U.S. $400 million for military equipment, and the U.S. refusing to provide the equipment after the Shah of Iran was overthrown during the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

The $1.7 billion included the original $400 million and “a roughly $1.3 billion compromise on the interest,” according to a statement by John Kerry, the secretary of state at the time.

The $400 million came from a foreign military sales trust fund, and the $1.3 billion in interest came from Treasury’s judgment fund, which pays lawsuit settlements or judgments against the government. That’s according to a December 2016 Congressional Research Service report and September 2016 congressional testimony by the Treasury Department’s assistant general counsel for enforcement and intelligence.

The Treasury counsel, Paul Ahern, said the money was sent to European banks, which changed it to foreign currency to be remitted to Iran. He acknowledged that cash was involved because U.S. and international sanctions on Iran “had effectively cut off Iran from the international financial system.”

Jan. 6 Claims

Trump also claimed without evidence that some of the people who were arrested for entering the U.S. Capitol during the riot on Jan. 6, 2021, had been “ushered into the building” by “FBI agents.”

After Welker asked Trump if people who attacked police officers that day should be compensated via a $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund that the Justice Department announced and then halted due to bipartisan backlash, Trump said, “I wouldn’t be inclined to say so, but I have to see it.” He then argued that some of the roughly 1,400 people who were charged with entering or remaining in a restricted federal building or grounds had been victims of government weaponization.

When Welker told Trump that “172 people did plead guilty to assaulting police officers,” he said: “They pled guilty because they were frightened. They went down. They were ushered into a building. Many of them were arrested without even going into the building.” Earlier, he said that there were “FBI agents ushering them into the building.”

But as Welker said, there is no evidence that FBI agents did that.

A December 2024 report from the Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General said that “several hundred” FBI special agents and employees were deployed after the Capitol already had been breached by rioters who broke through windows and doors. The report also said that there were no undercover FBI employees at the Capitol on Jan. 6. 

In addition, there were 26 FBI informants, or confidential human sources, in Washington, D.C., that day “in connection with the events planned” for Jan. 6, the report said. However, those individuals are not agents or employees.

During the riot, 17 of the 26 informants entered the Capitol or a “restricted area” outside of the building. But the report said that none was authorized to do so or “to encourage others to commit illegal acts.” Only three informants were tasked with informing the FBI about suspects attending Jan. 6 events; other informants who went to the Capitol did so by choice.

As for Trump’s claim that “many” people “were arrested without” entering the Capitol, that ignores some of the serious offenses — such as assault — committed by people who were outside of the building. As an example, NBC News published photos of David Dempsey assaulting officers with a pole and pepper-spray just outside of a tunnel leading inside the Capitol. He later pleaded guilty to assaulting, resisting or impeding officers with a deadly weapon and was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Dempsey was one of the many rioters who pleaded guilty to using weapons to assault officers, who — according to police statements and media reports — suffered cuts, bruises, sprains, concussions, bone fractures and other injuries.

When Trump took office in January 2025, he pardoned or commuted the sentences of every person charged with committing an illegal act during the Capitol riot. His executive order also directed the attorney general to seek dismissal with prejudice of all pending indictments against individuals for conduct related to Jan. 6 events.

More Repeats

There were more claims in the interview that we’ve fact-checked before:

Gasoline prices. Trump said that gasoline prices would “drop like a rock” once the war in Iran was over, saying they were “going to go lower than they were before.” Energy experts told us that prices will start to drop when the war ends, but it could take many months before the national average price is back to its pre-conflict level. The average U.S. price for regular grade gasoline was $4.15 per gallon as of the week ending June 8, according to the Energy Information Administration, up about 41% from the week ending Feb. 23, five days before the U.S. and Israel launched airstrikes.

“For pre-war prices to show up, it could take beyond a year,” Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis for the fuel-price tracking service GasBuddy, told us, adding that there are “a lot of different potential” outcomes depending on what happens when the war ends.

Economy. He has said it over and over again — “I had a great first term. I had the greatest economy ever.” This time, the president added: “And you know what? This one’s blowing it away.” By the measure favored by economists — growth of real (inflation-adjusted) gross domestic product — the U.S. economy wasn’t the greatest ever during Trump’s first term.

Annual real GDP growth peaked in that term at 3% in 2018, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Dating back to Ronald Reagan’s presidency, real economic growth has exceeded Trump’s peak year 17 times. 

As for this term “blowing … away” the first? Not so far. Real GDP growth was just 2.1% in 2025. The annual rate for the first quarter of 2026 was 1.6%, according to the BEA’s second estimate released in late May.

Factory construction. Trump mentioned that “we’re building more factories.” But that’s not what the Census Bureau’s manufacturing construction spending data show — data that the White House cited earlier this year when Trump made claims about this issue.

The monthly figures show a nearly 20% decline in manufacturing construction spending, from January 2025, when Trump was sworn in, to April, the most recent data available. On a quarterly basis, construction spending went down 18%, from the fourth quarter of 2024 to the first quarter of this year. And on a yearly basis, the drop was 6.6% from 2024 to 2025.

See our February story for more on what factors have affected this spending under the prior administration and under Trump.

Although there has been a slight uptick in manufacturing jobs this year of 23,000 jobs, overall manufacturing employment has declined during Trump’s second term by 68,000 jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That comes after a drop of 202,000 jobs in Biden’s last year in office.

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