Online fans of President-elect Donald Trump are embracing a highly improbable theory that the most salacious parts of the dirty dossier, published last night by BuzzFeed, are the creation of an anonymous 4chan user.

Their 'proof' is a 4chan posting from November 1 that says, 'So they took what I told Rick Wilson and added a Russian spy angle to it.'

A Reddit post from last night, lays the whole conspiracy theory out.

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Online fans of President-elect Donald Trump are suggesting the contents of a controversial dossier, released by BuzzFeed, came from 'fanfiction' mailed to an anti-Trump GOP operative

Online conspiracy theorists point to this November 1 post, which suggests someone made up a story, told it to Rick Wilson, and that's how the dossier came about

A Reddit user outlined the strange theory, suggesting that the salacious parts of the controversial dossier, released by BuzzFeed, were nothing more than fictional stories made up by a 4chan user and mailed to an anti-Donald Trump GOP political consultant

Rick Wilson pushed back at the 4chan and Reddit chatter, saying he wasn't involved. He was brought into the conspiracy theory because he warned of damning opposition research on Donald Trump that could come out several weeks before the election

'/pol/lacks mailed fanfiction to to anti-Trump pundit Rick Wilson about Trump making people piss in a bed Obama slept in.'

From there, it suggested Wilson, who helped independent candidate Evan McMullin run for the White House against Trump, gave the material to the CIA and that's how portions of the 35-page dossier ended up in a two-page intelligence report, reportedly given to President Obama and President-elect Trump.

GOP consultant Rick Wilson got dragged into a weird conspiracy theory about the origins of the dirty dossier

Wilson, both on Twitter and in a Medium post, pushed back vigorously upon hearing these claims.

First, he said he wasn't BuzzFeed's source and even challenged BuzzFeed to reveal him as the news organization's source if he was.

'Why? Because the first time I saw the memo was when BuzzFeed published it,' Wilson said. 'I’ve never had possession of that memo, never shared it, never pitched it, and never requested or caused others to do so.'

'Allegations from the memo were making the rounds in the IC, political, and media worlds, to be sure, but its origins are elsewhere,' the GOP strategist added.

He was likely fingered because of comments Wilson made in mid-October suggesting to the Daily Caller that there was opposition research on Trump coming down the pipeline that could 'end the race.'

Wilson told the Caller's Jamie Weinstein that there were some damaging stories out there related to Trump's personal life.

'Trump’s personal life has long been a complicated thing and there are a number of stories out there that are being worked [on] by the networks and by the other folks that I think would be very consequential, particularly in how conservative and evangelical voters view Donald Trump,' Wilson said at the time.

The dossier was an opposition research document, not an official write-up from the intelligence community, but Wilson didn't have anything to do with it.

He wasn't BuzzFeed's source. Trump, at today's press conference, suggested that someone within the U.S. government had given the dossier to the online publication.

Wilson was also neither the creator of the file, nor the one who handed it over to the U.S. government, as both of those sources have likely been revealed.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., volunteered the information that he handed information to the FBI.

Additionally, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday afternoon that the writer of the dossier was Christopher Steele, an ex-British intelligence official, according to 'people familiar with the matter.'