A man dressed in fatigues going through a mall in Pennsylvania on Black Friday, was confronted by a Purple Heart recipient who called the man out as a fraud.

Army Sgt. Ryan Berk, 26, who served in Afghanistan in the 101st Airborne Division, saw the man shopping in the Oxford Valley Mall, and says he quickly realized he was likely not the Army Ranger he claimed to be.

Berk decided to record the confrontation with the man, and began to question him as to why things were not in place on his uniform.

The man, who claimed to be a U.S. Army Ranger, could not answer all of Berk's questions about the uniform, and at one point says, "You got me, bud."

"Stolen valor at its finest. Why don't you just admit that you're a phony?" Berk says on the video.

The video, which was posted on Stolen Valor, a Facebook page dedicated to outing military imposters, had been seen more than 3 million times as of Wednesday night.

The Stolen Valor Act of 2013 makes it a federal crime to receive any tangible benefits for falsely representing oneself as a recipient of military honors or decorations. It is not a crime to wear a military uniform if you are not a member of the armed services, only to receive "tangible" benefits from wearing the uniform.

While the man in the video, who has been identified as Sean Yetman, had shopping bags, it has not yet been determined if he was asking for military discounts in the mall, according to The Allentown Morning Call. According to the Army Times, Berk warned one store manager not to give him a discount. He has not been charged with any crime.

The Bucks County Courier Times reported that Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick, (R-Pa.), said the encounter "could 'possibly' contain evidence of a federal crime."

He said charges could be filed against the man if he is not a military member and wore the uniform to get military shopping discounts.

According to the Morning Call, a woman who answered the door where the man is believed to live in Philadelphia claimed he had a military background but declined to provide details.

While the man answered some of the questions about his training, the fact that his uniform had three combat infantry badges was the final straw for Berk.

"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," Berk told Fox News.

The badge could be awarded during four periods: World War II; Korea; Vietnam and other Cold War era actions through March 1995; and the War on Terror, from 2001 to the present, the Morning call reported.

"The only three-time earners would have had to serve in World War II, Korea and Vietnam, because nobody who earned one in Korea would have still been active for the desert wars," Col. Richard Nurnberg, executive director of the National Infantry Association, told the Morning Call.

See the video here. (warning: expletives in the video)

Updated at 12:30 a.m. to correct headline. Updated 7 a.m. Thursday with more information on the combat badges the man had on the uniform.

