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No Evidence Supports Claims That USAID Paid Celebrities to Visit Ukraine
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No Evidence Supports Claims That USAID Paid Celebrities to Visit Ukraine

Elon Musk shared a video making fabricated claims.

Hollywood actor and film director Sean Penn (left) meets Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as he hands over his Osca to the Ukrainian president in Kyiv, Ukraine on November 8, 2022. (Photo by Ukrainian Presidency/Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

A viral video claims that Hollywood actors were paid by USAID to visit Ukraine and meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. “WHY WOULD USAID PAY HOLLYWOOD CELEBRITIES OUR TAX DOLLARS TO MEET ZELENSKY???” text in the video reads. Below it includes amounts ranging from $1.5 million to $20 million supposedly paid to Jean-Claude Van Damme, Ben Stiller, Sean Penn, Orlando Bloom, and Angelina Jolie.

The claim is false. There is no evidence that USAID paid celebrities to visit Ukraine.

The video’s claims first appeared in another viral video that began circulating online in early February. At the time, BBC Verify, the BBC’s fact-checking unit,  identified that video—which falsely identified itself as being produced by E! News—as fake and likely part of a Russian disinformation campaign. The claim, however, was popularized after being shared by Elon Musk.

Records from usaspending.gov—an official source for departmental spending data—show no payments from USAID to Van Damme, Stiller, Bloom, Jolie, or any of their respective charities. CORE (Community Organized Relief Effort), a disaster relief charity started by Sean Penn, has received financial support from USAID in the past, including a $5.4 million grant in January 2024 to support the nonprofit’s humanitarian work in Haiti. However, there is no evidence that the charity received funding in exchange for the actor’s visit to Ukraine in November 2022, and Penn has not individually received any funds from USAID. 

Stiller, who is featured in both videos, denied that he was paid to visit Ukraine in a post on X. “These are lies coming from Russian media,” Stiller wrote. “I completely self-funded my humanitarian trip to Ukraine. There was no funding from USAID and certainly no payment of any kind.”

USAID has been subject to a multitude of false claims in recent weeks, including debunked allegations that it was providing significant funding to Politico. The agency has received intense scrutiny from the White House since January as Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency push to cut spending across the federal government.

If you have a claim you would like to see us fact check, please send us an email at factcheck@thedispatch.com. If you would like to suggest a correction to this piece or any other Dispatch article, please email corrections@thedispatch.com.

Alex Demas is a fact checker at The Dispatch and is based in Washington, D.C. Prior to joining the company in 2023, he worked in England as a financial journalist and earned his MA in Political Economy at King's College London. When not heroically combating misinformation online, Alex can be found mixing cocktails, watching his beloved soccer team Aston Villa lose a match, or attempting to pet stray cats.

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