When a U.S. Army veteran spotted a fellow veteran in uniform in a Pennsylvania mall, he noticed something was amiss about the man's appearance.

Ryan Berk, who was on "Fox and Friends" today, decided to confront the suspected Army Ranger imposter, asking him basic questions that any combat veteran would be able to easily answer.

For instance, he pressed the "Ranger" on why his combat patch wasn't on his uniform. The man claimed he had given it to a little kid.

"Why don't you just admit you're a phony? You know it's illegal what you're doing right now?" Berk said.

The man then walked off after denying he was an imposter and refusing to say his full name.

Berk then yelled "stolen valor" at the man in the middle of the crowded mall, telling the man that he had friends die in Afghanistan in the uniform he was wearing.

Watch the video below, which has been viewed more than 2 million times since Friday.

Warning: video contains profanity.

Ryan Berk sat down with Brian Kilmeade this morning to go over how the whole scene unfolded in the Oxford Valley Mall on Black Friday.

Berk said he often stops to talk to fellow veterans, but the man raised his suspicion with the stories he was telling to a young boy in the mall.

Berk added that the man's boots weren't tucked, the flag patch was not in the proper position on the sleeve and some of the badges were off center.

He said initially the man gave some answers that could have been correct, but his story seemed to unravel when he claimed he had three combat infantry badges from service in Afghanistan.

Berk told him it was impossible for a veteran to be given three different CIBs.

"I noticed his combat infantryman's badge, he had two stars above it, which would indicate that he served in three different wars which is almost physically impossible for his age," said Berk.

He told Kilmeade he believes that more and more phony vets are out there, with most going unnoticed.

"There's more than just this guy walking around, posing as service members, claiming they've sacrificed as much as some of my friends have. When it's seen, it needs to be called out and these guys need to be prosecuted," said Berk.

The Allentown Morning Call reports that Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.) has contacted the U.S. Attorney's Office about the alleged imposter.

Read more from the report below: