"Widespread suspicion" refers to a situation where many people have a strong belief or doubt about something being wrong or dishonest.
Full definition
Unlike other crypto heists, the circumstances surrounding the alleged BitGrail attack have been met
with widespread suspicion.
The British marine insurer Standard Club is understood to have cancelled the insurance on all ships owned by Femco, a Russian cargo line,
amid widespread suspicion it planned to break the EU sanctions against the Middle East regime.
Unlike other crypto heists, the circumstances surrounding the alleged BitGrail attack have been met
with widespread suspicion.
Part of the reason for this attitude is that the church is subject to
the widespread suspicion of institutions.
Nevertheless,
the widespread suspicion of a quest for truth cut off from practice has some justification.
Few would query the proposition that constituency Labour party groups should have a voice in how their parliamentary representatives cast their votes, but what has caused very considerable ill - feeling has been
widespread suspicion that Momentum, a recently - formed group of Corbyn supporters, orchestrated a campaign to pull MPs into line — with the threat of deselection if they failed to do so.
This is the line Cuomo has taken, in the face of
widespread suspicions that he helped create the IDC for his own benefit.
That taps into
a widespread suspicion around Westminster that the report was substantially changed between its tabled release time of 10:00 BST and the actual one, around 17:30 BST.
There is
widespread suspicion that the disease was brought in by United Nations peacekeepers from Nepal, and that the UN is now covering it up.
This leads to
the widespread suspicion that the whole exercise is one in profile - raising for Brussels so that everyone realises how much research the Commission pays for.
There is
a widespread suspicion that painting's fall from grace can be blamed on the artists and the critics who conceived of its history in overly exclusionary terms.