The sad part is that he's wearing his beret more correctly than many real soldiers I see every day...
I saw a guy get busted like this at the PX at Ft Lewis, he was being taken out in handcuffs by MPs. A SF CSM or 1SG (didn't close enough to be sure) stopped him and ripped off the SF tab and shoulder patch and snatched the green beret out of the guy's pocket. The guy looked about as SF-qualified as Jack Black in "Tropic Thunder"! This was right before 9/11, so the patches were sewn on and the NCO ripped them off with one move of the hand. Heck, I tried that later on with one of my ragged out BDUs and I couldn't even open the patch up! I wasn't 100% sure if the guy was a faker or just shamed his unit somehow until the next day when one of my soldiers told me he'd been there when it happened. The real SF NCO saw something not quite right about the guy and started playing the "who do you know?" game as SF was a small community at that time. Turns out, the guy had never served at all and he walked onto a large Army post
with a SF uniform.

I never heard what they did with the guy, though…
Still, I get a little worried when I see stories like this because it makes people want to go in public and "out" people lying about their service and sometimes they get it wrong. Folks just need to be
VERY careful about who they "call out" as a liar. I've been called a liar a few times via the internet for claiming I was an Army Captain. The problem is, I really
was one, and have all the paperwork to prove it. I mean for crying out loud,
who would lie about being a Ordnance officer in a mech Brigade, and never having been in combat?

I even had someone corner me at a re-enactment years ago when I was still in the reserves, said he'd seen most internet posts on a WW2 re-enactor forum and was there to "bust" me for lying about my service. I pulled out my wallet and held up my Army ID card to his face and didn't say a word. His jaw dropped and he walked away without saying anything. I never found out who the guy was. I'd have made a terrible Ranger as I have a awful time remembering people's names (I always said I joined the Army because people's names were on their clothes). Today I could only name a few people I served with and would really come across as a liar if someone ever tired to play the "who do you know game" with me!
A buddy of mine really was a SEAL and never made a big deal about it, never even had it on a resume, never went to reunions, had anything on his car or shirts to that effect, and it'd rarely ever come up in conversation. Not that he did anything secret or had bad memories, he just never thought anyone would care because he never saw combat and was raised by a WW2 Marine vet who'd "been there done that" and didn't think his own service would impress anyone as he just trained a lot and left the Navy after he'd been on the teams through that enlistment. He made the mistake of once talking about it at work and a co-worker of his went nuts and went on a rampage to "out" him as a imposter. He got the local media into it, and when the TV cameras came to the door, my friend was confused. They accused him of lying "to look like a man," and asked how empty his life had to be to lie about something like that. He went back inside, dug out a worn copy of his DD-214 and the TV folks stood on his doorstep with a "what do we do now?" look on their faces and quickly turned off the cameras. When he asked them if they'd even bothered to check his service somewhere, they looked at him blankly, especially when he pointed out that since he'd gone through the training and was on a team, his name had to be out there on some database if they'd bothered to look it up (which it was there when did a search of his name online). They didn't even apologize as they left. Obviously, the story never aired because there wasn't a story. My friend got that co-worker back eventually in spades and got a written apology from the TV station, but that's another story…