I have information that will lead to the arrest of hillary clinton
I have information that will lead to the arrest of hillary clinton
HAD INFORMATION THAT WOULD LEAD TO THE ARREST OF HILLARY CLINTON: SOURCE OF HILLARY “DIRT” of Trump Tower Meeting IS KILLED in “MYSTERY” Russian Helicopter Crash; TWO BULLETS FOUND IN PILOT’S BODY
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“TWO BULLETS FOUND IN PILOT’S BODY.”
A high-ranking Russian law official believed to be the authority behind attorney Natalia Veselnitskaya, who took part in the notorious Trump Tower meeting with Donald Trump Jr during the presidential campaign, has been killed in a mysterious helicopter crash.
Deputy prosecutor-general Saak Karapetyan – a long-time ally of President Vladimir Putin – died last night when his AS-350 came down in Kostroma region northeast of Moscow during an unauthorized flight.
Karapetyan had been in charge of Russian criminal investigations into the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the UK, and the deaths of Putin critic Boris Berezovsky and of dissident Alexander Litvinenko.
Deputy prosecutor-general Saak Karapetyan died in a helicopter crash overnight. He was closely tied to lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya, of the Trump Tower meeting fame
The US Magnitsky Act, championed by the late accountant’s client, American-born British financier and human rights advocate Bill Browder, was signed into law by then-President Barack Obama in 2012.
The law authorizes the government to sanction Russian human rights offenders, freeze their assets, and ban them from entering the US.
According to reporting by The Daily Beast, in 2014, Karapetyian signed a letter sent on behalf of the Kremlin to an American court, refusing to help with a civil lawsuit concerning Magnitsky’s death.
It is believed the letter was composed with Veselnistkaya’s input.
On June 9, 2016 – five months before Election Day – Veselnistkaya met in Trump Tower in New York City with Donald Trump Jr, Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort and others.
It has been alleged that then-candidate Trump’s surrogates agreed to meet with the Russian lawyer because they were promised compromising information about Clinton provided to Veselnistkaya by Kaarapetyian’s office, according to leaked emails of introduction.
Trump Jr has vehemently denied that the meeting had anything to do with ‘dirt’ on the Democratic candidate, instead claiming that its focus was Russian adoption policy.
Veselnistkaya has offered a different version of events, publicly claiming that she and Trump campaign officials talked about the prospect of overturning the Magnitsky Act.
‘[I]f we come to power, we can return to this issue and think what to do about it. I understand our side may have messed up, but it’ll take a long time to get to the bottom of it,’ she recalled Trump Jr telling her, in an interview with Bloomberg News.
The meeting in Trump Tower is currently at the center of special counsel Robert Mueller’s ongoing investigation into allegations of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia and interference by the Kremlin in the 2016 election.
President Trump has repeatedly and vociferously denied colluding with Russian, calling Mueller’s probe a ‘witch hunt’ in countless tweets.
The helicopter crash that ended the life of Veselnitskaya’s suspected handler, Karapetyan, came just hours before four Russian intelligence officers were outed by the Dutch government as having tried to hack the global chemical weapons watchdog OPCW in The Hague in April, shortly after the Novichok nerve agent attack in Salisbury, UK.
It has today been claimed that ‘his death will resolve a number of very painful issues’ in the Russian government.
An anonymous insider posted on a channel on the popular Telegram messaging app called NeZygar that Karapetyan’s death ‘will stop leaks of highly confidential information to the West’.
The insider claimed it would specifically prevent leaks to the secret services of Britain, the US and Switzerland, and stop attacks on Putin’s security council chief Nikolai Patrushev.
Information That Will Lead to Hillary Clinton’s Arrest Meme
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Information That Will Lead to Hillary Clinton’s Arrest
About
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.
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.
Spread
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).
Fact Check: Did Japan’s Ex-PM Incriminate Hillary Clinton 1 Day Before Being Assassinated?
After the assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a screenshot purporting to show a tweet from Abe before his death began circulating online.
According to the Associated Press, the tweet showed Japanese characters with a supposed translation in English underneath.
“I have information that will lead to the arrest of Hillary Clinton,” the translation read.
However, the AP determined claims that Abe tweeted this were false.
“Abe’s verified Twitter account uses a different username and profile picture than the ones shown in the altered image,” the outlet reported.
“The Japanese text in the altered image does not mention Clinton, either.”
Instead, the AP found the Japanese characters loosely translated to, “to repeat, I.”
Abe was shot Friday while giving a speech endorsing a candidate in Nara, Japan, NPR reported. He died of his injuries shortly after.
This is not the first time a hoax regarding Hillary Clinton circulated following the death of a high-profile figure. In an article from 2020, the Associated Press reported a similar incident after Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died.
Just like the fabricated tweet from Abe, a fake tweet from Ginsberg promised incriminating information about Clinton.
The AP reported Ginsberg did not use a personal Twitter account, and the account from which the tweet was allegedly sent had no connection to her.
While neither of these tweets turned out to be real, the virality of this trend gives an insight into Americans’ feelings about Clinton.
Clinton has not been politically relevant since she lost to former President Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election. Nonetheless, many people are still discussing her shady behavior.
If social media users wanted to create a hoax that would sully the name of a political figure, one would think they would choose a politician with potential power, such as Trump or President Joe Biden.
Instead, these hoaxes have revolved around Clinton, who has been out of the political spotlight for six years now.
False as these tweets are, they are based on a kernel of truth: Clinton has lived her life in a shady manner. From her infamous emails to her alleged spying on Trump and his campaign, she has been riddled with scandals throughout her career.
Americans do not trust Clinton, and they have made this fact clear by bringing up doubts about her following high-profile deaths.
Truth and Accuracy
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AP runs fact check on fake Abe tweet about Clinton
The Associated Press ran a fact check of a screenshot of a tweet circulating online that was purportedly written by former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe about Hillary Clinton, determining that the tweet was fake.
A screenshot shared online showed a tweet apparently posted by an account with the Twitter handle “@ShinzoAbe” that included a Google translation in English reading, “I have information that will lead to the arrest of Hillary Clinton.” It was purportedly written before Abe’s death, on July 7 at 1:09 p.m.
The screenshot also shows a Twitter verified blue checkmark next to the user’s name.
The AP determined the screenshot and its tweet were fake for several reasons. The Japanese text included in the screenshot of the tweet does not actually reference Clinton, Abe’s real Twitter account uses a different photo and account handle and the tweet is actually referencing a meme, the outlet reported.
The AP also noted that the typeface used in part of the screenshot of the tweet was different from that used on the social media platform, behind some of the words there is a little discoloration, there appears to be some stretching and pixelation of the Japanese characters and the screenshot is blurry.
Reuters also ran a fact check of the screenshot of the tweet and determined that the tweet did not actually come from the former Japanese prime minister.
The longtime Japanese leader was giving a campaign speech on Friday when he was killed by a gunman. A suspect was soon detained by police.
President Biden in a statement said he was “stunned, outraged, and deeply saddened” and called the attack a “tragedy.”
Twitter influencer Douglass Mackey, aka Ricky Vaughn, arrested for allegedly tricking Clinton backers to lose their votes in 2016
A Donald Trump supporter in Florida has been arrested for allegedly tricking likely Hillary Clinton voters into thinking they were casting their ballots by text message so they wouldn’t bother with going to the polls in 2016.
Douglass Mackey, 31, whose Twitter handle was Ricky Vaughn, was arrested Wednesday in West Palm Beach and made an initial court appearance on charges of conspiring to deprive people of their voting rights, the US Department of Justice said in a statement.
«There is no place in public discourse for lies and misinformation to defraud citizens of their right to vote,» federal prosecutor Seth DuCharme said. «With Mackey’s arrest, we serve notice that those who would subvert the democratic process in this manner cannot rely on the cloak of internet anonymity to evade responsibility for their crimes.»
Mackey, whose alias was named after Charlie Sheen’s character in the movie «Major League,» was described by the Huffington Post as «Trump’s most influential white nationalist troll.» A study by MIT’s Media Lab said Mackey was among the 150 leading influencers of the 2016 presidential election, ranking ahead of such big names as NBC News and the Drudge Report.
Prosecutors allege that between September and November of 2016, Mackey conspired with other Twitter users to send fraudulent messages encouraging people to vote via text or social media message. Mackey is accused of tweeting an image of a black woman in front of a sign saying «African Americans for (the candidate). Avoid the line. Vote from home.» Recipients were advised to text the candidate’s name to 59925.
At least 4,900 unique telephone numbers texted the name to that number, the DOJ said. The votes, of course, weren’t valid. No estimate was offered for how many of those people, if any, didn’t cast a legal vote as a result of thinking their ballot had been submitted via text.
Prosecutors didn’t specify which candidate’s voters were targeted, but Twitter messages from November 2016 show the ad described by the DOJ and similar pitches urging voters to text «Hillary» to 59925.
Twitter just informed me that attempting to disenfranchise voters is not a violation of their Terms of Service. @jack @Support pic.twitter.com/YXVdt8sHwA
The Ricky Vaughn account was banned by Twitter in 2016 for alleged harassment, but Mackey reportedly opened other accounts in different names.
Music video producer Robby Starbuck argued that Mackey is being charged for a meme that was sent as a joke. «The only people who should be charged in this situation is the people who were dumb enough to try to vote by text message,» he tweeted.
The only people who should be charged in this situation is the people who were dumb enough to try to vote by text message. They should be charged with criminal levels of stupidity. *spoiler for stupid people: you cannot vote by text message*
Business consultant Donna White noted the irony that prosecutors were defending the voting rights of Hillary Clinton supporters who may have been duped by Mackey while allegations of massive election fraud in 2020 were brushed off. «Millions believe this happened to us in the 2020 presidential election, and not one official investigation,» she said. «I may even be banned on this site for stating this.»
Accused of [infringing] «one the of most basic and sacred rights guaranteed by the Constitution: the right to vote» yet millions believe this happened to us in the 2020 presidential election and not one official investigation. I may even be banned on this site for stating this.
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Источники информации:
- http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/information-that-will-lead-to-hillary-clintons-arrest
- http://www.westernjournal.com/fact-check-japans-ex-pm-incriminate-hillary-clinton-1-day-assassinated/
- http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/3551193-ap-runs-fact-check-on-fake-abe-tweet-about-clinton/
- http://www.rt.com/usa/513829-trump-hillary-clinton-election-troll-arrested/