Oprah Winfrey wants to make one thing clear: she was NOT arrested for 𝓈ℯ𝓍 trafficking.

The media giant took to Twitter to deny that she had been arrested or raided after her name became one of the trending topics on the social platform thanks to false rumors circulating online.

Earlier in the evening, “Oprah” and “OPRAH DID WHAT” were trending topics on Twitter after a slew of tweets claimed that the mogul’s house in Boca Raton, Florida, was seized and roped off with red tape. Others connected the alleged reports of Oprah’s arrest to the spread of coronavirus, falsely claiming that the global pandemic is somehow a coverup for the mass arrest of celebrities involved in a 𝓈ℯ𝓍-crime ring.

This rush of tweets seems to have started from QAnon, a conservative trick bunch that posts crazy phony stories on each and every web-based entertainment stage, the vast majority of which propagate a huge scope scheme guaranteeing that a worldwide first class secrecy is looking to 𝓀𝒾𝓁𝓁 President Donald Trump.

Oprah isn’t the just celeb targeted: a post on Twitter — which has north of 2,100 retweets or shares — erroneously guarantees that Tom Hanks didn’t really test positive for Covid in Australia like he guaranteed, however that the cherished entertainer was truly captured for pedophilia. The post proceeds to say that other Elite stars will before long be captured.

This dangerous group also pushed the thoroughly discredited “Pizzagate” conspiracy theory that went viral during the 2016 presidential election, purporting that Hillary Clinton and other “Washington elites” ran a pedophile ring out of a pizza restaurant in Washington DC. Not only did this theory derail Clinton’s campaign, it caused a North Carolina man to open fire with an assault rifle on the pizzeria in attempt to find and rescue the child 𝓈ℯ𝓍 slaves he believed were being held captive at the restaurant.

Now, it appears this disgusting group is at it again, and they’ve likely been inspired by the Sociopath in Chief publicly calling the COVID-19 pandemic a Democratic hoax — something that many of his supporters still believe, despite Trump having since declared a national emergency.

Thankfully, many are fighting this stupidity pandemic with reason. Selma director Ava DuVernay was one of many who defended Oprah from the false rumors, writing:

“Trolls + bots began this disgusting rumor. Mean-spirited minds kept it going. Oprah has worked for decades on behalf of others. Given hundreds of millions to individuals + causes in need. Shared her own abuse as a child to help folks heal. Shame on all who participated in this.”