Contrary to the way SourceFed describes the inner workings of a search engine, Google mentions that its autocomplete does filter for terms, particularly ones that could link someone's name with things that are potentially hurtful or disparaging. This isn't especially new information, as Google has previously manually adjusted its results for copyright reasons, and has even been fined for defamatory results.

Searching 'Donald Trump law' suggests lawn, but not his numerous lawsuits.

If you're still not sure it works that way, one could try a similar test with Clinton's presumptive competitor in the presidential race. While Donald Trump has had stories written about him that include the word "rape" or "lawsuits," searching his name plus ra- or la- shows neither word as a suggestion. A blog post by marketer and SEO expert Rhea Drysdale goes into more detail about how this works and why, for those interested. Finally, simply typing in Hillary shows a top autocomplete suggestion with "Clinton email" for reasons that should be obvious by now. That single result can't conclusively prove Google isn't hiding something, but if it is, then it's doing a terrible job of warning people off of the ongoing investigation.