The wheels of justice turn slow in Germany. So slow, that you might murder 3,300 people, and not be charged with a crime for 80 years.
But the wheels turn, and after those 80 years, you will eventually pay for killing those 3,300 people.
You can’t just get away with it. The German authorities will eventually figure out that 3,300 people are dead and they will find you.
RT:
German courts have opened the way for a 100-year-old alleged former concentration camp guard to stand trial, overturning an earlier lower court’s decision that he was unfit to do so.The suspect, identified as Gregor Formanek in the German media, was charged last year with complicity in the murder of more than 3,300 people while working in an SS guard battalion at the Sachsenhausen death camp during World War II.
An medical expert determined in February that the centenarian was unable to stand trial due to his physical and mental condition. A district court in Hanau then made the decision to not continue proceedings.
A higher regional court in Frankfurt on Tuesday found the expert’s findings to have been insufficient, after a local prosecutor’s office and several co-plaintiffs lodged complaints about the Hanau district court decision.
Frankfurt Attorney General Torsten Kunze welcomed the move, stressing the trial could be one of the last of its kind, underscoring its historical importance, German daily Frankfurter Rundschau wrote on Tuesday.
I’m not sure about “historical importance,” but it is historic.
Never before in history has someone murdered 3,300 people and not been charged for 80 years.
Well, that hadn’t happened before a couple years ago, when the Germans started rolling out all these 100-year-old men and accusing them of mass murders. There is never any evidence (there couldn’t be evidence from 80 years ago) and no one thinks a 100-year-old is fit to stand trial.
It’s just “the ritual torture of the elderly for the sake of edifying the Jews.”
It’s not different than in India where people torture children in front of pagan idols in order to gain the favor of a demon.