"Far-fetched" is a compound word, spelled with a hyphen. It is not spelled as two words, it is "far-fetched," not "far fetched."
I have _never_ heard it used in the verb form. I don't think it would be a good idea to use it that way.
A problem with your example is that facts can't be "far-fetched." You could say "you are stretching the facts."
A "far-fetched" theory or explanation is complicated and implausible. If you were going to use it as a verb, you might use it like this:
"The simplest explanation of how the Nixon tape got erased is to assume that Nixon erased it. Alexander Haig far-fetched a theory about a 'sinister force,' but nobody believed it." This is _very, very_ unnatural. In fact, most readers would assume it was a typo, and that you'd meant to write "Alexander Haig mentioned a far-fetched theory about a 'sinister force...'"
A natural verb to use would be "concoct:" "Alexander concocted a theory about a 'sinister force,' but nobody believed it."