BCN-10 Former Fed Chair Greenspan survives Twitter hoax

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Former Fed Chair Greenspan survives Twitter hoax

WASHINGTON, Oct 10, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Famed former US Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan is alive and well despite a brief Twitter hoax in
which a Nobel-prize winning economist appeared to announce his death,
Greenspan’s company said Tuesday.

The Twitter account which had announced the news quickly claimed the
misinformation was in fact the work of famed Italian hoax artist Tommasso
Debenedetti, who frequently makes premature announcements of celebrity
deaths.

The social media network briefly lit up early in the day when an
unverified account in the name of Yale University economist William Nordhaus
announced that Greenspan, 92, had died.

Nordhaus, who was awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in economics on Monday, was
not immediately available for comment.

However Greenspan & Associates, the former Fed chairman’s Washington
consultancy, told AFP the report was untrue.

Greenspan’s wife, NBC News Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent Andrea
Mitchell, also took to Twitter to put the kibosh on all the loose talk.

“By now you know the rumors are a hoax,” she wrote. “Alan’s doing great.
In fact, he has a book out next week!”

Debenedetti is reportedly behind serial false reports of the deaths of
world figures such as former communist leaders Fidel Castro and Mikhail
Gorbachev as well as Pope Benedict XVI, Syria’s Bashar al-Assad and British
author JK Rowling.

“Death works well on Twitter,” a person identifying himself as
Debenedetti, a school teacher in Rome, told AFP in 2013.

He said he aimed to “show that Twitter has become a news agency — the
least reliable in the world.”

Meanwhile, Tuesday was not the first time Greenspan — who in 19 years as
Fed chairman oversaw a period of economic boom and stepped down just before
the United States headed into the Great Recession — had been the subject of
exaggerated reports of his demise.

US stocks tumbled in June of 2000 after the Federal Reserve hesitated
before denying a rumor that Greenspan had been killed in a car crash.

BSS/AFP/HR/0940