Sunday, July 25, 2010

Late German Judge Exposed Arab Mafia Child Abusers


Judge Kirsten Heisig was found dead in a field after she disappeared back in June. Heisig exposed the importing of Palestinian kids into Germany as slaves for the Arab drug cartels. She was singularly brave and vocal.

The gangs' latest trend is to fetch young people under the age of 14," Heisig wrote, explaining, "This has the particular appeal of lacking the threat of punishment."

The authorities are calling her death a suicide. Yeah, right. Looks like she met the same fate as the children who who are kidnapped into slavery -- no threat of punishment.

They are calling her death a suicide? Cover-up. She was murdered by murderers.

Explosive book on child trafficking by "Youth Judge"
When Judge Kirsten Heisig, 48, disappeared from Berlin without a trace, the search was on.

The last sign of life is to have a SMS sent to one of her two daughters. Heisig wanted to take the girls to holiday in the next few days.

Kirsten Heisig, mother of two daughters, 13 and 15 years old.

When her abandoned car was found in a forest, special hunt dogs were sent out.

The judge works in the city’s gritty Neukölln district. There she instituted changes simplifying and accelerating punishment for youth crime.

But her body was found in a field on the edge of Berlin

Searches had been under way in the city since Kirsten Heisig, 48, vanished on Monday evening. Known for a zero-tolerance campaign to crack down on repeat juvenile offenders in the deprived Berlin neighbourhood of Neukoelln, she had been criticized by ethnic minorities.

Officials say it was a suicide because there was no evidence any other party was involved in the death.
I am very far away and don't know all the facts but count me suspicious of the suicide conclusion. It is more likely that she ran afoul of very powerful, criminal Arabic drug cartels.
Excerpts are now being printed from her book The End of Patience which will be published in Germany at the end of this month Heisig made final changes to the manuscript on the last day she was seen alive. The excerpts are explosive.

Arabic drug cartels are trafficking children and youths from Palestinian refugee camps into Germany, according to excerpts published on Monday of a book by a Berlin youth judge who committed suicide last month.

Heisig described the process by which children and youths were flown in from the Lebanese capital, Beirut, by traffickers who took their passports and promised them a better life.

The youths reportedly told German officials they were living with relatives after their parents had died, and said their families had spent their last penny on sending the children to Germany in pursuit of a better life.

In Germany, these young people disappeared from youth homes and were taken in by their own communities, where they were taught how to master the drugs trade...The judge said it had struck her how often youths she sentenced for heroin trafficking in central Berlin had actually been assigned to care homes across Germany, where their disappearance was merely registered with the authorities.

About an Inconvenient Youth Court judge in Berlin-Neukölln

Berlin judge: Arab drug mafia importing Palestinian kids into Germany Haaretz
In new book, judge who killed herself writes that drug gangs are recruiting young refugees into a life of crime under the noses of German authorities.

Arabic drug cartels are trafficking children and youths from Palestinian refugee camps into Germany, according to excerpts published Monday of a book by a Berlin youth judge who killed herself last month.
Kirsten Heisig wrote in an unpublished book that young Palestinian asylum seekers often gave suspiciously similar reasons for coming to Germany.

In her book, The End of Patience, Heisig described the process by which children and youths were flown in from the Lebanese capital, Beirut, by traffickers who took their passports and promised them a better life.
In Germany, these young people disappeared from youth homes and were taken in by their own communities, where they were taught how to master the drug trade, Heisig wrote in a section of her book.
The judge said it had struck her how often youths she sentenced for heroin trafficking in central Berlin had actually been assigned to care homes across Germany, where their disappearance was merely registered with the authorities.

The gangs' latest trend is to fetch young people under the age of 14," Heisig wrote, explaining, "This has the particular appeal of lacking the threat of punishment." The judge also criticized the German authorities for failing to perform rigorous checks on young asylum seekers entering the country.
Atlas Shrugs

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