| Guilty Verdict! Justice Is Lynn in Jail for 7 Years! Trial of William Lynn: a Compilation. Philadelphia Jp2 Army - John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army
By Paris Arrow
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils...
July 22, 2012
http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2012/04/trial-of-willaim-lynn-compilation.html
William Lynn is the highest Roman Catholic Church officer to be brought to justice and found guilty by a secular jury in our American secular court of law (without Rosaries or Eucharist or Vatican Canon Laws influences) and it is time our American justice system also give him the maximum penalty of 7 years of jail time without parole in deference to the hundreds of thousands of victims of the JP2 Army – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army http://jp2army.blogspot.ca/ named aptly after the longest reigning pope of the 20th century who did and said nothing about this most heinous crimes against children in Christendom and of the 20th century and ironically John Paul II is also the fastest tracking saint and biggest Opus Dei Golden Cow. Lynn is probably the first and perhaps the last Roman Catholic high ranking officer to be convicted (since Cardinal Bernard Law who admitted to transferring 80 pedophile priests was glorified in Rome by the Achilles Heel of John Paul II and his colleagues of all other Bishops and Cardinals have gotten off scot-free by settling financially almost 3 billion dollars with victims, the Vatican Bank won’t feel a dent of this cheap change.) The judge should not be swayed by Lynn’s lawyers who are saying that Lynn poses "no danger to the public," his defense lawyers argue, so putting him away for a maximum prison term of seven years would amount to "cruel and unusual punishment." This "no danger to the public," is not justice at all for all the victims of JP2 Army or Lynn’s victims. The judge and American and The Hague should learn from the Jews especially from this latest Nazi war criminal living with another false identity and a different name who was recently caught in Hungary -- who also posed "no danger to the public » -- ever since he left Germany and stopped being a Nazi but instead lived a quiet happy life in the free world, see news article below . The Catholic Church would like Lynn to be released so that he can continue being a wizard of Christ’s Flesh, read about priests who cannot reincarnate dead cats and dogs but can reincarnate God here http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2012/06/international-eucharistic-congress-in.html like criminal Cardinal Bernard Law did in the glories of Rome, read our related article, Sins and crimes are not synonymous. “Sins” is a Roman Catholic Church's word and theological concept while “crimes” is a secular word and society's reality. Sins are blamed on the Devil or Satan who tempted the Catholics’ first parents Adam and Eve to commit Original Sin while crimes are blamed on the criminals. http://pope-ratz.blogspot.ca/2010/05/sins-and-crimes-are-not-synonymous.html
SNAP and The Hague should emulate the Jews who hunted down and prosecuted and jailed Nazis for life and William Lynn should rot in jail for the maximum 7 years as his conviction and guilty verdict warrants. The judge in Philadelphia should learn from what Efraim Zuroff, said and should also look at Lynn at the height of his power when he endangered children (and not follow the Roman Catholic church recipe of glorifying criminals like Lynn and Cardinal Bernard Law, read our related article on Law here http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2012/01/boston-10th-anniversary-and-bernie-law.html
In Israel, Efraim Zuroff, director of the Wiesenthal Center’s Jerusalem office, applauded the arrest.
“When you look at a person like this, you shouldn’t see an old frail person, but think of a man who at the height of his physical powers devoted all his energy to murdering or persecuting and murdering innocent men, women and children,”
News update for July 21, 2012
Suspected Nazi war criminal who lived in Canada for decades arrested in Hungary
Pablo Gorondi, The Associated Press July 18, 2012
BUDAPEST, Hungary — A 97-year-old Hungarian man who became a Canadian citizen in 1955 and is suspected of abusing Jews and helping deport thousands of them during the Holocaust was taken into custody Wednesday, questioned and charged with war crimes, prosecutors said.
The case of Laszlo Csatary was brought to the attention of Hungarian authorities by the Simon Wiesenthal Center last year.
Prosecutors decided to charge Csatary with the “unlawful torture of human beings,” a war crime that carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Csatary’s lawyer, Gabor Horvath B., said that a judge, acting on a request from prosecutors, ordered his client to be confined to house arrest for a maximum of 30 days.
Horvath B. said he had appealed the ruling, which also opened the way for authorities to confiscate Csatary’s passport.
Tibor Ibolya, Budapest’s acting chief prosecutor, said Csatary recounted his Holocaust-era activities to authorities during questioning, saying he was following orders and carrying out his duty.
“The suspect denied having committed the crimes,” Ibolya said, adding that during his testimony Csatary’s “attitude toward some of his fellow men of a certain religion … is not what we would consider normal.”
Prosecutors detained Csatary in an early morning sweep because they were worried he may try to flee. He has lived at least in two separate Budapest apartments during the last few months.
“We took Csatary into custody at dawn from an address to which he had no connection until now,” said Ibolya. “He co-operated with investigators.”
Csatary’s lawyer said his client had moved to a new location because he was tired of being badgered. On Monday, 40 people held a protest outside one of Csatary’s purported homes but he was nowhere to be seen.
According to a summary of the case released by prosecutors, Csatary was a police officer in the Slovakian city of Kosice, at a time part of Hungary.
In May 1944, Csatary was named chief of an internment camp at a Kosice brick factory from where 12,000 Jews were deported to Auschwitz and other Nazi death camps.
Authorities said Csatary was present when the trains were loaded and sent on their way.
Csatary “regularly” used a dog whip against the Jewish detainees “without any special reasons and irrespective of the assaulted people’s sex, age or health condition,” the prosecutors’ statement said.
As one train departed with some 80 Jews crammed into one railcar, Csatary refused a request by one of the Jews to cut holes in the walls of the wagon to let more air in, the statement said.
“We took into consideration the severity of his acts, but we should not forget that the suspect is due the presumption of innocence,” Ibolya said. “In our estimation, he will not be able to escape.”
Ibolya said considering Csatary’s age, he was in good physical and mental condition, although experts had yet to examine him.
Csatary was been convicted in absentia for war crimes in Czechoslovakia in 1948 and sentenced to death. He arrived in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia the following year, became a Canadian citizen in 1955 and worked as an art dealer in Montreal.
In October 1997, Canadian authorities said the 82-year-old had left the country, apparently bound for Europe, before they had the chance to decide his fate in a deportation hearing. His citizenship had been revoked in August and the deportation order was based on his obtaining citizenship by giving false information.
Canadian authorities alleged that Csatary had failed to provide information concerning his collaboration with Nazi occupation forces while serving with the Royal Hungarian Police and his participation in the internment and deportation to concentration camps of thousands of Hungarian Jews.
Ibolya said the investigation into the Csatary case was continuing and that prosecutors were waiting for information from Israel, including the possible testimony of survivors, and Canada.
“I expect this case to continue for months, even taking into account that we are treating it as one that we would like to conclude as soon as possible,” Ibolya said.
In Israel, Efraim Zuroff, director of the Wiesenthal Center’s Jerusalem office, applauded the arrest.
“When you look at a person like this, you shouldn’t see an old frail person, but think of a man who at the height of his physical powers devoted all his energy to murdering or persecuting and murdering innocent men, women and children,” Zuroff told the AP.
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Laszlo Csatary (L), aka Ladislaus Csizsik-Csatary, leaves the courthouse in Budapest on July 18, 2012, after he was placed under house arrest for 30 days following questioning by an investigative judge at the military's prosecution's office.
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The Simon Wiesenthal Centre welcomed the arrest by Hungarian police of the Nazi war crimes suspect, who topped the US Nazi-hunting organisation's most wanted list. Csatary is accused by the Wiesenthal Center of having helped organise the deportation of some 15,700 Jews to the Auschwitz death camp during World War II.
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Hungarian Laszlo Csatary, suspected of war crimes against Jews during World War Two, leaves the prosecution building in Budapest July 18, 2012.
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