Mollath steadfastly maintains he has been railroaded. And just this week the story broke that
he may well be telling the truth.
The bank has released documents indicating that Mollath’s charges
against his ex-wife may have some substance. She and others were fired from their job. A friend of Mollath's has come forward with the information that Mollath's wife let it slip she she knew how to "do him in."
Now the question is why the bank didn’t come to Mollath’s
defense? Did they have something to hide?
Was the Hypo-Vereins Bank in Nuremburg actively involved in illegal
activities? Why else would they
sit idly by with proof that Mollath’s charges against his ex-wife may have been
legitimate and let him be locked away by a local D.A. who argued to the contrary?
This could still be a story about a conspiracy
theorist. Mollath isn’t the only
person behind bars maintaining his innocence. But if it’s a story about a cover up, it has the makings of
a major scandal. So far I’ve found
it covered only in the German media, but it has international implications,
first off because it involves international tax fraud and money laundering via
Swiss bank accounts, secondly because alarms naturally go off when any mortgage
bank falls under suspicion. Mollath
apparently named names. What are
those names, and were his wife and her colleagues fired because of illegal
extra-curricular activities? Or were they paid off to keep quiet about the bank’s
participation? So far no guilt has
been established, but what is one to do with the disconnect between the bank
and the Ministry of Justice? The
bank had evidence from the start there was wrongdoing, but when Mollath
testified to that effect he was declared delusional. What is that all about? And what are we to make of the fact
that when Merk gave her report in March of this year she deliberately left out the fact that her office was in possession of the bank’s evidence? Where is this buck going to stop?
The charge that Mollath was delusional is one thing. What about the second charge –
that he was “dangerous”? How, in any case, was it possible to institutionalize
a man simply on his ex-wife’s charges that he attacked her? And what’s with the small
fine? Apparently there were no
witnesses involved, and the fine was a mere 1000 euros, hardly a sum one would
levy for attempted murder.
Justice Minister Beate Merk is politically connected to the
CSU, the Christian Social Union, the Bavarian sister party to the Christian Democratic Union,
Germany’s governing political party.
The opposition smells blood.
Germany has a group of independents known as the “Free Voters.” They are especially strong in Bavaria
(about 10% of voters) and their leader has labeled all political parties in
Germany as a bunch of losers. They seem to be picking up the charge against Minister
Merk. And Mollath now has a fairly
professional website set up to raise support for his case.
I’ve tried to find English language sources on this story,
but so far have come up empty-handed.
If your German is up to it, the details are available here.
Stay tuned.
Something’s bound to break on this story eventually. Definitely movie thriller material.
The picture above shows a number of clippings about the story from various German newspapers. If I am violating any copyright laws, please let me know and I will instantly take the picture down. Google Images attributes it to this link.
1 comment:
You will find English material here http://muschelschloss.blogspot.de/2013/06/the-case-gustl-mollath.html
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