“I wouldn’t be surprised, yeah. I wouldn’t be surprised,” Trump responded.

Asked whether the funder could be Soros, Trump said: “I don’t know who, but I wouldn’t be surprised. A lot of people say yes.”

Trump’s comments came in the wake of Soros being targeted with a pipe bomb last week and the fatal shootings this weekend at Pittsburgh synagogue by a suspect who posted frequently about the migrant caravan.

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The White House did not immediately respond Thursday to a question about what evidence Trump has that points to the possibility that Soros, a wealthy Jewish donor, has funded a caravan that originated in Honduras.

In the run-up to next week’s midterm elections, Trump has repeatedly pointed to the caravan as a symbol of what is wrong with U.S. immigration policy and blamed Democrats for not passing legislation in a Republican-controlled Congress.

Trump told reporters that he considers such caravans “very dangerous,” adding: “We’re not going to allow people to come into our country that don’t have the well-being of our country in mind.”

This week, a U.S. government agency announced that it was launching an internal investigation after airing a Spanish-language program earlier this year describing Soros as a “multimillionaire Jew” and espousing conspiracy theories about the billionaire philanthropist.

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The 15-minute segment was aired in May by Radio and Television Martí, which broadcasts news and other programs promoting U.S. interests to audiences in Cuba.

On Thursday, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) sent a letter to the U.S. Agency for Global Media, which oversees the broadcaster’s parent office, seeking answers on the program’s production.

The theory about Soros funding the caravan dates to late March, when an earlier wave of migrants was heading north. The rumors circulated on Facebook groups and various right-wing websites, as well as on left-wing sites seeking to debunk them.

The rumors cropped up again in recent weeks when a new caravan started receiving attention among conservatives. Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) posted a video on Twitter of someone supposedly handing cash to migrants to “storm the U.S. border,” and asked, “Soros?”

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Fox News host Laura Ingraham and Fox Business hosts Maria Bartiromo and Lou Dobbs have also raised the possibility that the caravan is getting outside funding.

Cesar Sayoc, the Florida man authorities have accused of mailing more than a dozen bombs to people who have criticized Trump, appeared to be obsessed with Soros, mentioning him dozens of times on one of his Twitter accounts.

Robert D. Bowers, charged with killing 11 people Saturday at a Pittsburgh synagogue, also reposted several viral comments on a since-deactivated social media account about the migrant caravan. One post described the “third world caravan” as a group of approaching “invaders.”