Terry Moran has been a network journalist for over 30 years. He has covered the White House, anchored for ABC News, and spent his career telling you what’s true and what isn’t.
On March 11, 2026, he posted a fake Trump tweet as real — expressed outrage about it — and when he got caught, he deleted it without a single word of explanation.
Stephen L. Miller spotted it immediately and replied directly to Moran: “It’s a fake post, Terry.” He included a link showing exactly how the fabrication was constructed.
Fox News correspondent Bill Melugin put it even more bluntly: “One look at the font could have told you that.”
The font. A journalist with three decades of experience couldn’t look at the font.
Moran didn’t issue a correction. He didn’t post an explanation. He didn’t acknowledge that his followers had already seen it and shared it. He just deleted the tweet and went quiet — which is exactly what he would crucify a Republican politician for doing.
This is the same network that runs segments on Trump’s “misinformation.” The same anchors who explain why you can’t trust what you read online. The same journalists who say they exist to tell you what’s real.
Terry Moran couldn’t tell the difference between a real Trump post and a fake one. Bill Melugin could tell by looking at the font. Stephen Miller spotted it in seconds.
The people lecturing you about disinformation can’t spot it in their own feed when it confirms what they already believe. That’s not a Terry Moran problem. That’s the whole business model.