No Google-engineered website for COVID-19 screening

What Trump said on March 13: "Google is helping to develop a website. It's going to be very quickly done, unlike websites of the past, to determine whether a test is warranted and to facilitate testing at a nearby convenient location ... Google has 1,700 engineers working on this right now. They've made tremendous progress."

The reality: Just hours after Trump claimed that Google was building a website to help Americans determine whether they need to be tested and then direct them to the closest testing site, Google issued a statement saying this was not true.

Instead, a pilot website only for California was developed by Verily, a company owned by Google's parent company, Alphabet. The website, Project Baseline, is now only available to people who live in five counties in California.

At the same time, health-insurance company Oscar Health, which is closely tied to Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner, built a website designed to do what Trump promised the Google site would do. Kushner's brother, Josh Kushner, is a co-founder and investor in Oscar, which prompted legal experts to point out that the project might violate ethics laws.

The Oscar project was later shut down.