WASHINGTON (AP) — For presidential candidates, a compelling personal history is an essential item in the campaign tool kit.
That’s not to say they tell the story straight.
Republican Ben Carson has amended his claims that West Point offered him a scholarship, saying he’d been told he could get one but didn’t apply. Questions persist about his accounts of being a violent youth.
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), for another, has backed off suggestions that his parents’ journey from Cuba was to flee communism. The size of Donald Trump’s claimed fortune is suspect, and Carly Fiorina’s tale of progressing from an office secretary to a CEO isn’t quite what it seems.
Then there’s Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton, who once claimed she landed in Bosnia under sniper fire, only to admit there was no shooting going on.

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