Lady Michele Renouf Acquitted For Thought Crimes in Germany

Lady Michele Renouf Acquitted For Thought Crimes in Germany

At last it is safe to communicate the good news from Dresden, where the German state abandoned its prosecution of Michèle.  We were required to remain silent about this until the papers had been signed by the court on October 28th formally acquitting Michèle on all charges, and received by Attorney Wolfram Nahrath in Berlin on November 5th.


For once we have some good news!  This will be posted later this evening on the blog site etc.


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Victory!
Lady Renouf vindicated over Dresden speechAfter 32 months German courts back down, Renouf acquitted


In a last minute reversal, German prosecutors and a district court judge in Dresden have ended their criminal case against Lady Michèle Renouf, terminating a 32-month process, days before it was to come to trial.
Having arrested and charged Lady Renouf in 2018 immediately after her impromptu speech at a commemoration in Dresden, German prosecutors opened proceedings a year later under Germany’s notorious §130 Volksverhetzung law alleging “public incitement”, but the case has now ended without Lady Renouf being found guilty of any offence. (She has had to pay only a modest fee for the costs of a translator.)


“This decision was extraordinary – almost sensational”, says Wolfram Nahrath (Lady Renouf’s German attorney) who points out that such an ACQUITTAL of the charges in a ‘Holocaust’-related trial is a first in Germany.  The German authorities did not want to take the risk of putting Lady Renouf on trial, given her background and the German constitutional issues that would inevitably be highlighted.


The §130 Volksverhetzung law has been used to jail German scientists, authors and even lawyers in recent years. ‘Holocaust’-related offences of ‘public incitement’ almost inevitably lead to long prison sentences.
Yet the unique circumstances of Lady Renouf and her 2018 Dresden speech led prosecutors to withdraw.
The modeltrial.blogspot.com blog and related social media accounts will examine the extraordinary fabric of the Renouf case and explain why the German state chose to throw in the towel.