Last weekend President Donald Trump falsely suggested a terrorist attack in Sweden at a campaign-style rally at Orlando Melbourne International Airport in Melbourne, Florida. That rally set the tone for yet another week of misinformation from the White House.

To help you stay informed, we’ve broken down all the lies Trump and his team told this week.

He incorrectly implied there was a terrorist attack in Sweden.

Trump confused the international community when he spoke at a rally on Saturday in Florida and implied that there was an immigrant-linked terrorist attack in Sweden. "You look at what's happening in Germany, you look at what's happening last night in Sweden...Sweden, they took in large numbers," Trump said. "They're having problems like they never thought possible. You look at what's happening in Brussels. You look at what's happening all over the world. Take a look at Nice. Take a look at Paris."

Although Trump never explicitly said there was a terrorist attack the previous night in Sweden, he vaguely referenced “what’s happening last night” while listing places that had terror attacks by Islamic extremists. By mentioning Sweden’s immigration policy it sounded like he implied that the two ideas were connected.

As reported in The Guardian, one of Sweden’s official government Twitter accounts, run by a different citizen every week, promptly responded by describing Trump’s statement “incorrect information on top of incorrect information" in the tweet.

Trump has since clarified that his statement referred to an an interview the previous night on the Fox News show Tucker Carlson Tonight with Ami Horowitz, who directed a documentary about immigration in Sweden. During the interview, Horowitz said, "Sweden had its first terrorist Islamic attack not that long ago.”

By all accounts, there was no major violence related to refugees in Sweden the night before Trump’s Florida rally. According to PolitiFact, the most recent example of terror in Sweden was in January, when homemade bombs were used to attack a center for asylum-seekers. The suspects involved in that attack had previously belonged to a group that "openly promotes racist and anti-Semitic views and has vocally opposed non-white immigration to the country," according to the Independent.