True or False: Here’s a fact check of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump’s second presidential debate

Lie, baby, lie, make a voter sigh. We’re old enough to know better…

The second debate Sunday night between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton kicked off with fireworks — and the whoppers weren’t far behind.

Both candidates have broadsided the truth at various times throughout the topsy-turvy, 18-month 2016 campaign, and with a flood of fallout following the revelation last week of a tape from 2005 showing Trump using a slew of filthy terms in talking about women, many more were expected Sunday.

The Daily News is here to help you cut through the bull, and will be fact-checking the debate in real time.

Keep an eye on this page for the most bald-faced lies of the night.

THE “P—Y TAPE”

Trump: The GOP nominee was asked early on about the notorious 2005 tape, leaked Friday, showing him bragging about bragging how his fame helped him get away with grabbing women “by the p—-y.” CNN’s Anderson Cooper asked if Trump had ever actually acted on any of the lewd things he spoke of doing. On Sunday night, Trump said he had “great respect for women” but had “never done those things” that he was talking about. He also, at one point, said that he “didn’t say that at all … that was locker room talk.”

FALSE: Donald Trump was literally caught on the tape, an unedited 2005 conversation between himself and then-“Access Hollywood” host Billy Bush captured on a hot mic, spewing toxic, misogynistic words. He said that his fame had helped him get away with grabbing women “by the p—-y.” “You can do anything … When you’re a star, they let you do it,” he said.

The video evidence of Trump saying these things is indisputable.

BILL CLINTON’S TREATMENT OF WOMEN

Trump: He also took aim, as he has multiple times in recent days, at Bill Clinton’s treatment of women. “What he’s done to women … there’s never been anyone in politics that has been as abusive to women … and Hillary Clinton has attacked those same women.”

FALSE: It is known that Bill Clinton had extramarital sexual — but consensual — relationships with Gennifer Flowers, Monica Lewinsky, a high school friend named Dolly Kyle Browning, a former Miss America named Elizabeth Ward Gracen and a former Miss Arkansas named Myra Belle Miller. None of these women have alleged sexual abuse.

It is also known that four other women have accused Clinton of unwanted sexual advances. Paula Jones at one point filed a sexual harassment suit but it was dismissed by a federal judge. Juanita Broaddrick, a former nursing home administrator, has alleged that Clinton raped her in 1978. And Kathleen Wiley, a former White House aide, has alleged that Clinton touched her in his office in 1993. Neither the Wiley or Broaddrick accusations have been adjudicated by a judge or jury. Bill Clinton has long denied the accusations. Hillary Clinton has declined to address them.

As far as Trump’s claim regarding her having “attacked” those women? There is no evidence that this is true. While such accusations against Clinton fly freely on far-right blogs, the only well-accepted evidence that Hillary Clinton ever took action against any of the women involved with her husband was an allegation, in a 2008 book by Carl Bernstein that Clinton tried to obtain signed statements from several women in which they would have denied having affairs with Clinton.

Rudy Giuliani left alone to defend Trump on Sunday morning shows

ON WHETHER TRUMP HAS APOLOGIZED

Clinton: Trump “never apologized to Mr. And Mrs. Khan, the gold star family, whose son died in the line of duty in remark and Donald insulted and attacked them for weeks over their religion … He never apologized to the distinguished federal judge who was born in Indiana, but Donald said he couldn’t be trusted to be a judge because his parents were quote Mexican. He never apologized to the reporter that he mimicked and mocked on national television.”

TRUE: Donald Trump viciously attacked Khizr and Ghazala Khan, the Muslim-American parents of a fallen U.S. Army soldier, after they criticized him during a speech at the Democratic National Convention. Trump has called the fallen Khan a “hero” but has never apologized to the family for his remarks.

He has also never apologized for his suggestion in June that U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, the federal judge presiding over a fraud cases against Trump University that Clinton referenced, wouldn’t be able to be fair because of his “Mexican heritage.” “It’s an inherent conflict of interest,” he said of Curiel, who was born in Indiana. Trump has never apologized for the comment.

Hillary Clinton speaks as Donald Trump looks on during the town hall debate Sunday.

Hillary Clinton speaks as Donald Trump looks on during the town hall debate Sunday.

(Rick Wilking-Pool/Getty Images)

In addition, Trump has never apologized for having mocked a reporter’s physical handicap in November 2015, as Clinton pointed out. Trump said then, “Now the poor guy, you ought to see the guy” and began mimicking New York Times (and former Daily News) reporter Serge Kovaleski, who suffers from arthrogryposis, a congenital condition that limits the movement of the joints and weakens the muscles around them

He has never apologized.

THE WAR IN IRAQ

Trump: He again, on Sunday, claimed that he was against the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq before it started. “I was against the war,” he said. “And I would not have had our people in Iraq today.”

FALSE: As has been documented time and time again, Trump supported the Iraq War before it began. Most recently, Buzzfeed unearthed footage of a Trump interview on “The Howard Stern Show” from 2002 showing that Trump was, in fact, in favor of the invasion.

“Are you for invading Iraq,” Stern asks.

“Yeah, I guess so. I wish the first time it was done correctly,” Trump says.

Dozens of other fact checkers have failed to find any evidence that Trump was against the war before it started.

Hillary Clinton reacts as Donald Trump responds to a question about his remarks about women during their presidential town hall debate Sunday.

Hillary Clinton reacts as Donald Trump responds to a question about his remarks about women during their presidential town hall debate Sunday.

(RICK WILKING/REUTERS)

HILLARY’S EMAIL SERVER

Trump: Clinton and Trump once again sparred on the issue of the private email server she used during her tenure as secretary of state, with Trump, in one stretch, lumping together hacks on Democratic National Committee servers and alleged hacks on Clinton’s private server. “All you have to do is take a look at WikiLeaks and see what they say about Sanders and see what Wasserman-Schultz had in mind … I think the one you should really be apologizing for and this thing you should be apologizing for are the 33,000 e-mails that you deleted and that you acid washed.”

FALSE: While it is known that Clinton did delete about 32,000 emails from that server, there is no evidence that server was ever hacked. FBI Director James Comey said in July, in fact, that his organization had concluded that foreign powers had not hacked the sever.

The emails related to Florida congresswoman and former DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman-Schulz, on the other hand, are known to have been hacked by Russian intelligence elements.

OBAMA’S “RED LINE” ON SYRIA

Trump: “She was there as the secretary of state with the so called line in the sand,” the GOP nominee said, referring to a well-known line said by President Obama.

“No, I wasn’t. I was gone. I hate to interrupt you but at some point, we need to do some fact checking,” Clinton responded.

“Excuse me. You were in total contact with the White House. And perhaps, sadly Obama probably still listened to you.” Trump replied.

TRUE (for Trump and FALSE for Clinton): Obama’s infamous “red line” comments — when he suggested that the U.S. would take action against Syrian dictator Bashar Assad if he used chemical or biological weapons on his own people — came in August 2012. Hillary Clinton did not step down as secretary of state until February 2013.

Khizr Khan, father of fallen soldier Human S. M. Khan, holds a copy of the Constitution on stage during final day of the Democratic National Convention at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia on July 28.

(JUSTIN LANE/EPA)

In August 2013, Assad was found to have used chemical weapons on his own people and the U.S. did not follow up with military strikes as Obama has promised. John Kerry was secretary of state at that time.

TRUMP’S RELATIONSHIP WITH VLADIMIR PUTIN

Trump: “I don’t know Putin,” the GOP nominee said during an exchange regarding relations with Russia. “I think would be great if we got along with Russia because we could fight faces together as an example. But I don’t know Putin. But I notice anytime anything wrong happens they like to say the Russians we don’t know if it’s Russian.”

FALSE: Trump has repeatedly appeared to boast of close ties to Russia and on, on multiple occasions, said he had, in fact, met Putin.

During a November 2013 interview with MSNBC, Trump was asked if had “a relationship with Vladimir Putin,” to which he replied, “I do have a relationship.”

During a November 2015 GOP debate, Trump further said of Putin: “I got to know him very well because we were both on 60 Minutes. We were stablemates, and we did very well that night.”

TRUMP’S TAXES

Trump: “First of all I pay hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes,” the GOP nominee said during one exchange. “I pay hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes but as soon as my routine audit is finished, I’ll release my returns I’ll be very proud to. They’re actually quite good.”

FALSE: We don’t know how much Trump paid or hasn’t paid in taxes throughout his manic business career because he has yet to release his federal tax returns.

Viewers react as they watch Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton clash during the second presidential debate Sunday.

Viewers react as they watch Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton clash during the second presidential debate Sunday.

(John Minchillo/AP)

We do know however, due to a New York Times bombshell report last week that there were at least 18 years where Trump did not pay any federal income taxes.

And Trump even admitted to that later Sunday.

“Of course I do. Of course I do,” Trump said when asked in the debate if he had avoided paying federal taxes.

The admission confirmed The Times’ analysis of Trump’s 1995 federal tax returns, which revealed he had used a nearly billion dollar loss in the 1990s to avoid paying federal income taxes.

BENGHAZI

Trump: He also hit Clinton for the attacks on the U.S. compound in Benghazi. “Ambassador Stevens sent 600 requests for help and the only one she talked to was Sidney Blumenthal, who’s her friend, and not a good guy by the way,” Trump said referring to reports that Chris Stevens, the U.S. Ambassador to Libya who was killed in the attack, had appealed directly to Clinton for additional security.

FALSE: The “600” number has been misrepresented for years by Republican lawmakers and conservative commentators. Stevens was never in direct contact with Clinton herself — he would have communicated through the normal chain of command, according to The Washington Post — and the number used by Trump refers to a total of official security-related “requests and concerns,” which have different meanings in the State Department.

“A request is made via email or cable for physical security, equipment, or something related to the compound itself (lighting, barriers, wire, etc.),” a GOP congressional staff member explained to The Post. “Weeks or months later, the same unresolved issue is brought up again in a discussion. That’s a request and a concern In general, concerns followed requests. However, some concerns are independent of a request.”

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