Queen Elizabeth did not kidnap 10 children from a Canadian school

A Facebook post falsely claims that Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip have been found guilty for kidnapping native children.

The July 20 post is a rehash of a long-debunked claim: "After nearly a year of litigation, Queen Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Philip, were found guilty in the disappearance of 10 native children from the Catholic-run Kamloops residential school in British Columbia. An arrest warrant was issued by six judges of the International Common Law Court of Justice in Brussels."

This is not true.

The post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

This claim stems from news in May that the remains of over 215 children were discovered near the Kamloops Indian Residential School in British Columbia.

The Kamloops school was one of many in the Canadian residential school system, and it operated from 1890 to 1978, becoming the largest residential school in Canada with enrollment peaking at 500 in the 1950s.

But there is no evidence that Queen Elizabeth or Prince Philip had anything to do with the discovery — or the school.

The earliest claim of abduction that we found was a letter republished by an anonymous community member on the Daily Kos in 2010. In it, a supposed former student named William Arnold Combes alleged that the Queen and Prince Philip both visited the Kamloops Indian Residential School in 1964. According to Combes, the royal couple had a picnic with some of the children there and he "saw the Queen leave that picnic with ten children from the school, and those children never returned."

But the story has not been substantiated.

There is no evidence that Queen Elizabeth or Prince Philip ever visited the Kamloops Indian Residential School. Queen Elizabeth is the Canadian head of state, so the royal family’s visits to Canada are well documented. British Columbia’s website indicates that the royal couple has only visited the city of Kamloops together once in 1959, and Prince Philip visited the city alone in 1983.