Conservatives have since used the sentence to connect the mysterious deaths of individuals linked to Bill and Hillary Clinton in some manner, such as the suicide of White House Deputy Counsel Vince Foster in 1993, and the deadly armed robbery of Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich in 2016.
On Thursday, the hashtag broke into the mainstream, trending to number three in the United States. His emergence came after financial millionaire Jeffrey Epstein was found “injured and in a fetal place” just hours before on the ground of his New York prison cell.
When #ClintonBodyCount is trending on Twitter as a reaction to the story that Epstein “attempted suicide” you know people are hip to the game. They need him gone at all costs. ? pic.twitter.com/uFKsLk3EFu
— BlondeAnon (@miss_jordon) July 25, 2019
ANYONE denying the concrete connection, between Epstein and the Clintons, better look at themselves in the mirror and ask:
Am I really defending a criminal family who has been testified against by victims of sexual assault? #ClintonBodyCount
Advertisement— Antonio Villanueva (@tangentsreveal) July 25, 2019
#ClintonBodyCount (decades-old conspiracy theory) is trending. Apparently sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was injured in jail on Tuesday. Watch for people trying extra hard to convince you they know things they don’t today.
Advertisement— David Emery (@debunker) July 25, 2019
Troll farms earning their living already & it’s only 4 a.m. #Clintons #ClintonBodyCount
AdvertisementFix your fucking trash app @Jack
— Kno (@Kno) July 25, 2019
Leave a Reply