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Information That Will Lead to Hillary Clinton's Arrest is a series of memes referencing the Clinton Body Count conspiracy theory which speculates that Bill and Hillary Clinton ordered the assassinations of numerous political enemies and eyewitnesses to secure power and protect themselves from legal prosecution. The memes usually imagine famous deceased people announcing that they possess information which may indict Hillary Clinton shortly before their death.

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Origin

On June 12th, 2016, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange announced that Wikileaks was in possession of information which could lead to Hillary Clinton's indictment in an interview to British television network ITV (reupload shown below).[1]

We have accumulated a lot of material about Hillary Clinton. We could proceed to an indictment.

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In the following weeks, multiple news outlets in the US and globally reported on the interview, including articles by The Guardian[2], Observer,[3] and New York Magazine.[4] On July 22nd, 2016 and November 6th, 2016, the aforementioned leak, commonly known as the DNC Emails Leak, was released in two parts.[5]

The exact origin of the "Information That Will Lead to Hillary Clinton's Arrest" meme is unknown. On August 22nd, 2016, Twitter user @NubianAwakening posted the earliest known meme referencing the Clinton Body Count conspiracy theory containing the phrase (shown below, left).[12] Before August 31st, 2016, another meme presented as a fake tweet from late actor Gene Wilder who died two days prior was circulated (scrapped post shown below, right).[6]

In the following weeks, multiple tweets containing the phrase "I have Information that will lead to Hillary Clinton's arrest" were posted by users on Twitter.[7][8] On Facebook, memes featuring various characters saying the phrase were posted, including notable posts by Martin's Empire of Memes and Photoshop Things,[9] Club Penguin Bans [10] and God Emperor Trump [11] Facebook groups (examples shown below).

Following the death of sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein in a prison cell in August 2019, multiple posts referencing the Clinton Body Count conspiracy theory were made, including fake "I have information" tweets written from the perspective of famous deceased people, as well as fake tweets in which Epstein threatened to release information on meme-famous personae.

h2. Various Examples


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