Post by Deleted on May 18, 2017 11:23:18 GMT -5
More bizarre, inconsistent details about the alleged Muslim "terrorist" who conveniently left his wallet in the terror truck in Berlin last year.
First, we learned that Amri had been in close contact with the German police prior to the attack.
Now we learn that he was actually a drug dealer--something that is entirely inconsistent with his media profile as a Muslim fanatic.
It reminds me of Mohammed Atta's pre-9/11 history of using cocaine, drinking, and eating pork.
So much for government "terrorist" narrative in the Berlin false flag "ISIS" attack.
Berlin Truck Attacker Had Been Flagged as a High-Level Drug Dealer
www.nytimes.com/2017/05/18/world/europe/police-berlin-truck-attack.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=first-column-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0
May 18, 2017
BERLIN — Anis Amri, the Tunisian man who killed 12 people in an attack on a Christmas market in Berlin in December, had been flagged weeks earlier as a high-level drug dealer, according to a newly discovered police document that has caused an uproar in Germany.
The document, which was uncovered recently during a review by the Berlin city government, has induced a new round of anguished questioning in Germany about whether the country’s worst terrorist attack in decades could have been prevented.
Berlin’s interior minister, Andreas Geisel, who announced the discovery of the document on Wednesday, told city lawmakers on Thursday that a thorough investigation “is what we owe the victims, their families and the survivors.”
The document, dated Nov. 1, was uncovered by Bruno Jost, a former federal prosecutor whom the city hired to review the case. It said that Mr. Amri was suspected of “commercial-level, gang-related narcotics trafficking” — charges serious enough to merit prompt police action.
Mr. Jost also found a second document, one that characterized Mr. Amri as a low-level drug offender, of a kind that would not generally warrant the most urgent police action. That document was dated Jan. 17 but was then backdated to Nov. 1, Mr. Geisel said.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Mr. Geisel raised the possibility that the police were trying to cover up their failure to act on the Nov. 1 document by backdating the Jan. 17 document so that it appeared that the police had conflicting intelligence.
The Nov. 1 document “would have been enough to order an arrest warrant” — and, potentially, jail time, Mr. Geisel said.
Mr. Geisel also said it appeared that officers with the Berlin criminal police had stopped tapping Mr. Amri’s phone in June, despite having permission to monitor it until November.
Germany’s federal interior minister, Thomas de Maizière, who was in Brussels for a meeting with counterparts from other European Union countries, said he was stunned by the revelations, which he acknowledged raised troubling questions.
First, we learned that Amri had been in close contact with the German police prior to the attack.
Now we learn that he was actually a drug dealer--something that is entirely inconsistent with his media profile as a Muslim fanatic.
It reminds me of Mohammed Atta's pre-9/11 history of using cocaine, drinking, and eating pork.
So much for government "terrorist" narrative in the Berlin false flag "ISIS" attack.
Berlin Truck Attacker Had Been Flagged as a High-Level Drug Dealer
www.nytimes.com/2017/05/18/world/europe/police-berlin-truck-attack.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=first-column-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0
May 18, 2017
BERLIN — Anis Amri, the Tunisian man who killed 12 people in an attack on a Christmas market in Berlin in December, had been flagged weeks earlier as a high-level drug dealer, according to a newly discovered police document that has caused an uproar in Germany.
The document, which was uncovered recently during a review by the Berlin city government, has induced a new round of anguished questioning in Germany about whether the country’s worst terrorist attack in decades could have been prevented.
Berlin’s interior minister, Andreas Geisel, who announced the discovery of the document on Wednesday, told city lawmakers on Thursday that a thorough investigation “is what we owe the victims, their families and the survivors.”
The document, dated Nov. 1, was uncovered by Bruno Jost, a former federal prosecutor whom the city hired to review the case. It said that Mr. Amri was suspected of “commercial-level, gang-related narcotics trafficking” — charges serious enough to merit prompt police action.
Mr. Jost also found a second document, one that characterized Mr. Amri as a low-level drug offender, of a kind that would not generally warrant the most urgent police action. That document was dated Jan. 17 but was then backdated to Nov. 1, Mr. Geisel said.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Mr. Geisel raised the possibility that the police were trying to cover up their failure to act on the Nov. 1 document by backdating the Jan. 17 document so that it appeared that the police had conflicting intelligence.
The Nov. 1 document “would have been enough to order an arrest warrant” — and, potentially, jail time, Mr. Geisel said.
Mr. Geisel also said it appeared that officers with the Berlin criminal police had stopped tapping Mr. Amri’s phone in June, despite having permission to monitor it until November.
Germany’s federal interior minister, Thomas de Maizière, who was in Brussels for a meeting with counterparts from other European Union countries, said he was stunned by the revelations, which he acknowledged raised troubling questions.