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Added on the 25/08/2020 14:00:00 - Copyright : EFE Inglés
Goch (Germany), Aug 17 (EFE / EPA) .- (Camera: Sascha Steinbach) 58-year-old Dutchman B., self-proclaimed prophet of the cult known as "Order of Transformers", is being tried by a court in Cleves (West Germany), accused of 132 cases of sexual abuse of members of the order, 64 of which involved aggravated sexual abuse of a child and deprivation of freedom between December 2006 and October 2020.The Dutch citizen was arrested at the Graefenthal monastery in Goch (west of the country) in October 2020 after a young woman was rescued from the cult.FOOTAGE OF THE GRAEFENTHAL MONASTERY IN GOCH, WHERE THE SELF-CALLED PROPHET OF THE 'ORDER OF TRANSFORMERS' WAS ARRESTED
Magdeburg (Germany), Aug 25 (EFE/EPA), (Camera: Filip Singer).- Defendant Stephan Balliet attends the main trial for the terrorist attack in Halle, at the regional court of Magdeburg, Germany. The suspect, a 27-year-old German, began a gunfight and killed two people on October 9, 2019, in front of a synagogue and kebab store in Halle during the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur. FOOTAGE OF THE TRIAL.
Magdeburg (Germany), Aug 3 (EFE / EPA), (Camera: Clemans Bilan).- The trial over the terrorist attack perpetrated in Halle on October 2019 continued Monday at the Magdeburg Regional Court in Germany.The suspect, 27-year-old German neo-Nazi Stephan Balliet, faces life in prison after killing two people in front of a synagogue and a shop in Halle, during Yom Kippur.FOOTAGE OF THE TRIAL AT THE MAGDEBURG COURT IN GERMANY.
Magdeburg (Germany), Aug 3 (EFE / EPA), (Camera: Clemans Bilan).- The trial over the terrorist attack perpetrated in Halle on October 2019 continued Monday at the Magdeburg Regional Court in Germany.The suspect, 27-year-old German neo-Nazi Stephan Balliet, faces life in prison after killing two people in front of a synagogue and a shop in Halle, during Yom Kippur.FOOTAGE OF THE BURG-MADEL PRISON WHERE STEPHAN BALLIET WAS JAILED AFTER THE ATTACK.
Images at the start of the trial against Bjorn Hoecke, head of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party in Thuringia, who appears in court for publicly using a banned Nazi slogan. He stands accused of twice using the phrase "Alles fuer Deutschland" ("Everything for Germany"), once a motto of the so-called Sturmabteilung paramilitary group that played a key role in Adolf Hitler's rise to power. IMAGES