The White House was busy over the weekend clarifying President Donald Trump’s controversial tweet claiming President Barack Obama wiretapped Trump Tower during the 2016 elections.

Several reports speculated that this assertion was inspired by an article on Breitbart, the site formerly run by Trump's chief strategist Steve Bannon. White House deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders appeared on ABC's This Week this past Sunday, to assert that Trump’s tweet was based on “multiple news outlets,” including the BBC and The New York Times.

However, according to PolitiFact, “It’s clear only one [report] is at the root of Trump’s claim: a November 2016 blog post based on anonymous sources that has not been corroborated by independent U.S. journalists.” So far, PolitiFact has not found any independent evidence to support Trump’s allegation.

This Twitter controversy kicked off yet another week of confusing statements and incomplete information coming from the White House. To help you keep track of the truth, here is a list of the lies the Trump administration spread this week.

Trump exaggerated how many dangerous prisoners Obama released from Guantánamo Bay.

On Tuesday, Trump tweeted that 122 “vicious prisoners” released from Guantánamo Bay during the Obama administration have since returned to military activity.

It appears the president may have garnered that information from the media rather than from intelligence briefings because several news reports noted that Trump tweeted about this shortly after Fox & Friends posted a tweet using that same number of detainees and linking to a Fox News report that cited the number.

However, both FactCheck.org and PolitiFact noted that only nine of the former detainees who were confirmed to have returned to “the battlefield” were released during the Obama administration, based on the most recent government figures. PolitiFact also clarified that the majority of Guantánamo Bay’s reengaging detainees were actually released during the administration of Republican President George W. Bush. Furthermore, the New York Times reported that about half of the total detainees who returned to military activity have since been killed or are now in custody again.