ThoughtCrime: 01/03/06
Theil convicted of "revisionist questioning" in
France
On January 3, by decision of the high court of Lyon (6th
chamber, where press-related cases are heard; presiding judge: Fernand
Schir), Mr Georges Theil, a former elected official from the Front
National, was found guilty, under the Fabius-Gayssot Act (July 13,
1990), of a revisionist “questioning”.
Theil, who has been convicted before under the Fabius-Gayssot law,
(see: France sentences revisionist to Six Months Imprisonment)
ran afoul of the law by uttering before a reporter’s camera some
words on the technical impossibility of the Nazi gas chambers’ existence
and operation.
The court sentenced Theil to the following:
- Six months’ imprisonment without remission;
- €10,000 fine;
- Payment of the cost of having extracts of the judgement published
in the dailies Libération and Le Progrès (Lyon);
- Remittance of €3,000 to each of the eleven plaintiffs;
- Remittance of €1,000 to each of the eleven plaintiffs to cover
their legal costs;
- Payment of €90 in procedural fees.
Theil, through the intermediary of his Counsel, Maître Eric Delcroix,
is to lodge an appeal.
"Thoughtcrime does not entail death: thoughtcrime IS death."
- George Orwell
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