Monday, May 6, 2013

German Police Commit Elder Abuse!

 From the NSP News Service: The NSP strongly condemns the actions of the German police described below, and at the same time accuses them of outright "elder abuse." Moreover, 68 years have passed since the Third Reich legal process permitted the execution of Jews and other enemies of the State. It's time to let the whole issue wane with the sunset; any historical issues related to the execution of Jews and other State enemies of Third Reich Germany ought now be left to those who should rightfully possess access to those issues, that is, objective (i.e. non-Jewish) historians and researches from other fields.

Finally, what exactly is the "Holocaust?" That very word is an early 1970's invention of far-left, Marxist and Zionist crackpots. And the United States Holocaust Museum ought to be closed. Anyone else notice that among the mound of shoes supposedly transported to the U.S. from post-War Germany and other eastern European lands, there are rubber soled Adidas sneakers? Simply impossible. Actually criminal! 
 
-- Karl Wolff III, Director of Communications, NSP.  1488!
 
 

German police arrest 93-year-old suspected of being Auschwitz guard

German state police on Monday arrested a 93-year-old man suspected of being a former guard at the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp during the Holocaust, the agency said in a statement.
A news release on the police website did not name the suspect, in accordance with German law, but it said he had been arrested on suspicion of being an accessory to murder.
The suspect had served as a guard at the camp in Poland from the autumn of 1941 until the its liberation in early 1945, police said.
Following a search of the man’s apartment, the suspect was brought before a judge and was in investigative custody while an arraignment was being prepared, the statement said.
A spokesperson for the prosecutor’s office could not immediately be reached for comment.
According to German media reports, the prosecutor’s office had launched an investigation against the man in November 2012.
About 1.1 million people, including 960,000 Jews, died at Auschwitz, according to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

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