Linda Thompson (April 26, 1953 – May 10, 2009), born Linda Diane Capps, She died of a prescription drug overdose in 2009.

Conspiracy theories

Clinton body count

Thompson was opposed to the Bill Clinton presidency. In 1994, Thompson helped compile a list of 24 people with some connection to Clinton who had died "under other than natural circumstances". The list was included in a letter to the Congressional Record by former Rep. William Dannemeyer who called for hearings on the matter.

Waco siege conspiracy

In 1993, she produced a videotape entitled Waco, the Big Lie, which contained footage of the siege of the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, and a history of the community. The videotape was distributed widely, and for a short period after its release, she was a regular guest on talk radio shows. The film challenged the mainstream news reports of the Branch Davidian siege and created a small sensation, alleging a government cover-up of the events surrounding the siege. Thompson pointed out many inconsistencies in the official story and the government reports and the hypocrisy of using deadly weapons to "rescue" children from their parents.

Thompson also claimed that three Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms agents, whom she alleges were killed by friendly fire during the siege, were all former bodyguards of then-President Clinton and that the friendly fire was actually an assassination ordered by Clinton.

Black helicopters and FEMA camp allegations

She made a third film in 1994, America Under Siege accusing the government of using "black helicopters" against patriots, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) of establishing concentration camps, facilities she claimed were to prevent patriots from interfering with plans to establish a "New World Order". The supposed FEMA Camp was the Beech Grove Shops, an Amtrak repair facility in Beech Grove, Indiana.

Proposed march on Washington

In 1994, Thompson declared herself "Acting Adjutant General" of the "Unorganized Militia of the United States" and announced plans for an armed march on Washington, D.C., in September of that year. She declared that militiamen would arrest and try for treason in "Citizen's Courts" those Congressional representatives not living up to their oath of office. The proposed march was almost immediately denounced by groups on the right wing, including the John Birch Society, Later, she was arrested for blocking a Presidential motorcade in Indianapolis. She carried one concealed weapon and had another in her purse. Both guns were legal, and no charges were filed.