A fake MAGA Instagram model has been exposed for being AI and claiming stolen valor to her one million fans. The truth behind the account is finally coming to light
A fake Instagram account posing as a blonde Army soldier named Jessica Foster amassed more than 1 million followers before investigators exposed it as an AI-generated model.
The Instagram account is part of a growing trend of artificial intelligence-manufactured military personas built to attract audiences and generate online income.
Watchdog group Military Phony, which tracks false military claims, calls the practice “digital stolen valor,” fabricating military officials online to gain trust and money. Administrators draw a distinction between violations of the federal Stolen Valor Act, which bars falsely claiming specific military honors like the Purple Heart for material gain, and online impersonation that may not meet that legal bar but causes similar harm. This news comes amid signs of tension between Karoline Leavitt and Donald Trump after she admitted she’s not on his “team anymore.”
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Advances in AI are making fake identities faster to build, harder to detect, and more effective at exploiting public trust, researchers say.
A separate account that goes by the name Emily Hart mixed conservative political posts with lifestyle content before directing followers to paid adult subscription services.
Wired magazine reported the account was created by a 22-year-old medical student who used the pseudonym “Sam.” He told the outlet he turned to AI image generation to earn extra money while in school.
Sam used Google’s Gemini AI to shape the persona, which the chatbot steered toward a conservative identity. The tool noted that older American men tend to be more financially loyal to online creators, influencing the account’s direction.
The Pentagon declined to address the trend directly.
“As impersonating a member of the armed forces is a violation of federal law, we refer you to the FBI,” a Defense Department official told Military.com.
Legal experts say the difference between protected speech and criminal conduct comes down to money.
“Simply claiming to be a service member, without any commercial dimension, and simply seeking fame or influence, is generally constitutionally protected,” said Eugene Volokh, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and law professor emeritus at UCLA.
That protection ends when false claims are used to obtain money or other things of value.
“Thus, trying to get money or other valuables through knowing and material falsehoods, including by claiming to be a member of the military, is punishable,” Volokh said. “It could lead to lawsuits, civil enforcement and even criminal liability.”
The standard applies equally to AI-generated personas, Volokh said.
Meta, which owns Instagram, requires users to disclose AI-generated content but has not explained publicly how that policy is enforced. The company did not respond to questions.
Many accounts are taken down only after building large followings and generating major revenue.
Military Phony noted that AI images often distort uniform details and rank insignia that trained observers use to spot fakes.
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