- Teenage Satanist and far-right extremist sentenced for terrorism offences
- Man charged in stabbing death of mosque caretaker followed hate group online (satanic neo-Nazi death cult)
- Relatives mourn sisters killed in vicious machete attack "gory and violent drawings and pictures, including skulls, Satanic symbols and demons. In one photo, Urias is wearing a red-colored devil mask"
- Satanic worship, church burnings and murder: The true story behind ‘Lords of Chaos’ "We were singing about Satan and sadism, and everything that was wrong like torture"
- The NXIVM cult: How long are the leaders of going to jail for?
- 21 members of a South Korean religious cult were arrested in Singapore.
- Manson cult killer has parole release blocked
Teenage Satanist and far-right extremist sentenced for terrorism offences
Schoolboy avoids jail after admitting terrorism and child abuse image offences
Nadeem Badshah Mon 2 Nov 2020
A teenage Satanist and far-right extremist has been given a suspended sentence after posting bomb-making manuals on neo-Nazi forums and downloading indecent images of children.
Harry Vaughan, 18, a grammar school pupil who achieved four A* grades in his A-levels, was sentenced at the Old Bailey on Monday after admitting 14 terrorism offences and two child abuse image offences. He was given two years’ detention suspended for two years.
Vaughan was arrested by police in June last year following an investigation into an online forum called Fascist Forge.
Police found that the teenager, of south-west London, had been concealing his identity behind numerous aliases and boasting about school shootings, sharing explosives manuals and neo-Nazi propaganda online, expressing homophobic views and downloading indecent images of underage boys.
Digital forensic specialists retrieved 4,200 images and 302 files from Vaughan’s devices including an extreme rightwing terrorist book and documents relating to Satanism, neo-Nazism and antisemitism.
Police also discovered graphics encouraging acts of terrorism in the name of the proscribed organisation Sonnenkrieg Division and footage of the 2019 Christchurch mosque massacre....
Man charged in stabbing death of mosque caretaker followed hate group online
Guilherme 'William' Von Neutegem, 34, is accused of stabbing 58-year-old Mohamed-Aslim Zafis outside mosque
CBC News · Posted: Sep 21, 2020
The man charged with stabbing a volunteer caretaker to death at a Toronto mosque shared what appears to be content from a satanic neo-Nazi group in social media posts, according to an organization that tracks online extremism.
The revelation comes amid calls for the killing to be investigated as a hate crime, something the Toronto Police Service is considering at this time.
Guilherme "William" Von Neutegem, 34, is charged with first-degree murder in connection with the killing of Mohamed-Aslim Zafis....
Evan Balgord, the organization's executive director, describes the group Von Neutegem is linked to as a satanic neo-Nazi death cult.
"They're all the worst things that you could possibly think of," Balgord told CBC News.
"They are explicitly anti-Semitic and they're explicitly racist," Balgord said. "They worship Hitler as a God figure."
Balgord's organization isn't the only one concerned about the group's activity. According to the U.K. anti-hate research organization Hope Not Hate, the group's beliefs involve "culling" civilization, with followers encouraged to engage in extreme violence, random attacks and sexual assault....
Relatives mourn sisters killed in vicious machete attack by suspect once considered 'kind'
BY MICHELLE HUNTER Oct 27, 2020....
But Urias’ Facebook pages show a fascination with disturbing imagery. They are filled with gory and violent drawings and pictures, including skulls, Satanic symbols and demons. In one photo, Urias is wearing a red-colored devil mask, perhaps the one authorities say he was wearing during the killings.
In another picture, Urias holds a large knife as he stands shirtless with an upside-down cross around his neck, a drawing of what looks like a demon on a skeletal horse and a belt of bullets around his waist.
Rocky Tornabene said he’s been told about Urias’ unusual social media posts. But he said he suspects the images are linked to the hard-core heavy metal music that Urias – and Rocky Tornabene, himself – enjoyed, rather than a sign of sickness or a violent nature. Fortenberry said it’s likely the images are more a stereotype or phase.....
Satanic worship, church burnings and murder: The true story behind ‘Lords of Chaos’
By Steve Appleford
Feb. 12, 2019
The terrible dawn of Norwegian black metal came during the summer of 1984, during an adolescent season of inspiration in a small village outside Oslo.
Guitarist Oystein Aarseth and bassist Jorn Stubberud, both 16, formed a band called Mayhem, fueled on their love for the bleakest forms of heavy metal, slasher films and an attraction to rebellion and evil. To signify their break from mainstream Christian society — and in opposition to the glam-metal dudes in hairspray and spandex — the Mayhem founders took on ominous new identities: Aarseth would be known as “Euronymous,” Stubberud as “Necrobutcher.”
“That’s why we started to wear our hair all black. We were singing about Satan and sadism, and everything that was wrong like torture and stuff like that — the opposite of hanging around at the beach,” Necrobutcher, now 50, recalled of those days. “We were looking for perversity and craziness.”
They found it in their creation of a frantic metal subgenre that was uniquely grim and threatening, just as Mayhem and others in the Norwegian black metal scene began to stumble from a frightening made-up image and into tragic reality. Within a decade, bandleader Euronymous was murdered by another band member, and a Mayhem singer was dead from suicide. Others were sent to prison for murder and dozens of churches across the country had been burned to the ground by band members and black metallers inspired by their example....
The NXIVM cult: How long are the leaders of going to jail for?
One of the wildest scandals of the late 2010s was the chilling details of the NXIVM cult. Unearthed in 2017 by The New York Times, Frank Parlato, and former NXIVM members, NXIVM was responsible for sex trafficking, branding, and extorting money from many of its members. In 2018, after an FBI investigation, most of its leadership was arrested, including NXIVM founder and “vanguard” Keith Raniere.
In 2019, NXIVM’s arrested leaders either plead guilty or were convicted of the charges against them. In 2020, the sentencing hammer, or gavel, is coming down with two leaders already serving time behind bars. Plus, two new docuseries have been released on HBO Max & Starz respectively: The Vow and Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult.
What was advertised as a self-help group devolved into unspeakable sexual & financial crimes that are finally landing those responsible in jail.
21 members of a South Korean religious cult were arrested in Singapore.
By Divya Taery
By Divya Taery
21 men and women were arrested for being members of an "unlawful society" in Singapore on 11 November 2020. In other words, they were part of an unregistered secretive South Korean church.
According to Coconuts, 9 men and 12 women were arrested by the police from the Criminal Investigation Department.
Investigations revealed that they were connected to the local chapter of Shincheonji Church of Jesus (SCJ) which has been labelled as a cult in most places.
What are the tell-tale signs of a cult?
For starters, cults are helmed by charismatic living leaders (aka not an omnipresent god). They are real people who tend to be the main focus of the group, usually with the most power and authority.
According to The Guardian, cults also have a process of indoctrination but this is subtle as it comes across as educating new recruits. The process tends to favour the group and its leader.
Probably the most significant sign is the abuse. This could mean economic abuse, sexual abuse or mental abuse. This ranges from guilting members for more "donations" and alienating members from their family and friends.
So, is SCJ a cult?
The church is led by Lee Man-hee. He founded SCJ and claimed that Jesus Christ appeared before him as a "bright heavenly figure". Members refer to him as “the promised pastor,” “the one who overcomes” or “the advocate.”
They also believe he will live forever.
In their Singapore chapter, recruited members were not allowed to contact each other, verify/question teachings with other churches and speak to their family about the group's activities.
There are also many reports on how members cut ties with their family after joining the group.
Oh and the group believes that its founder Lee, is the second coming of Jesus Christ and he will take 144,000 followers to heaven with him on Judgement Day....
Manson cult killer has parole release blocked
Tuesday, 1 Dec 2020
California's governor has blocked the release of Charles Manson follower Leslie Van Houten, marking the fourth time a governor has reversed parole for the notorious cult murderer.
Governor Gavin Newsom said Van Houten, 71, would still pose a danger to society if released after more than five decades behind bars, citing her lack of "insight or candour" into her role in the gruesome 1969 killing of a Los Angeles couple.
"Given the extreme nature of the crime in which she was involved, I do not believe she has sufficiently demonstrated that she has come to terms with the totality of the factors that led her to participate in the vicious Manson family killings," Mr Newsom wrote.
The decision came after a parole board in July approved the release of Van Houten, who is serving a life sentence.
At the age of 19, she was among a trio of Manson followers who broke into the home of Leo and Rosemary LaBianca. Van Houten stabbed the latter 16 times....
No comments:
Post a Comment