
Trump Posts Video Of ‘Mysterious Deaths’ Linked To Hillary Clinton
On Saturday, President Donald Trump undoubtedly surprised many when he shared a video report that mentioned several “mysterious deaths” associated with former President Bill Clinton and former First Lady Hillary Clinton.
In his Truth Social post, Trump stated, “The Video Hillary Clinton Does Not Want You to See.” The video purports to document various deaths and suicides of individuals who were either close to or connected with the Clintons.
The video alludes to several prominent deaths that have been publicly speculated to be linked to the Clintons, including John F. Kennedy Jr., DNC staff member Seth Rich, former White House Counsel Vince Foster, and former White House intern Mary Mahoney.
In July 1999, John F. Kennedy Jr.—who was widely regarded as a potential competitor to Hillary Clinton for the U.S. Senate seat in New York—tragically died in a plane crash.
Mary Mahoney, a former White House intern during the Clinton administration, was fatally shot during a robbery at a Starbucks in Washington, D.C., in July 1997. Some believed she could have been a crucial witness during the impeachment proceedings.
The video also discusses the July 1993 death of Vince Foster, who was found in Fort Marcy Park near the George Washington Parkway in Virginia, in what was determined to be an apparent suicide.
In 1998, James McDougal, a significant witness for prosecutors in the Whitewater land scandal and a former financial associate of Bill and Hillary Clinton, passed away from cardiac arrest while incarcerated at the Federal Correctional Institution in Fort Worth, Texas, just before he was set to testify.
In 2015, Walter Scheib, a former Executive Chef at the Clinton White House, was discovered dead following what authorities classified as an accidental drowning. Scheib had gone missing while hiking a trail in Taos, New Mexico, and his body was later found submerged in a mountain drainage area that was carrying surface runoff.
In July 2016, DNC staff member Seth Rich was shot and murdered in Washington, D.C., as he was returning home from a bar. There has been speculation that Rich was the individual responsible for the leaked Democratic National Committee emails that were released by WikiLeaks—communications that severely impacted Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign.
The subsequent month, in August 2016, Shawn Lucas—a supporter of Bernie Sanders who filed a lawsuit against the DNC claiming it had manipulated the primary process to benefit Clinton—was discovered deceased in his residence.
HE WENT THERE: Trump Posts Video Compilation of Mysterious Deaths and ‘Suicides’ Linked to Hillary Clinton | Cristina Laila, The Gateway Pundit
President Trump went there!
Trump posted a video titled, “The Video Hillary Clinton Does Not Want You to See” that documented just… pic.twitter.com/MVx6WogCan— Owen Gregorian (@OwenGregorian) May 18, 2025
For many years, numerous rumors have circulated regarding the “Clinton body count” — deaths that some have considered to be highly suspicious, involving individuals who were in some manner connected to the former first family — yet there has never been any substantial evidence presented in a court of law linking the Clintons to any of these fatalities.
However, it is significant that the video clip was shared by the current president, who has been a long-time adversary of Hillary Clinton.
Snopes began addressing the ‘Clinton body count’ conspiracy theory prior to the onset of the 21st century, stating in 1998, “Since 1994, various reputable news organizations have encountered different iterations of the ‘Clinton Body Count’ list, conducted their own inquiries into some of the allegations, and found no evidence to support what they investigated. These inquiries ultimately resulted in yet another article about a peculiar conspiracy theory.”
The most recent occasion when #ClintonBodyCount gained traction online was after the reported suicide of convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein while he was in custody in a jail cell in New York City.
Democrats and supporters of Clinton promptly criticized Twitter for permitting the conspiracy to trend, as reported by Newsweek at that time.