Political police in the Swiss town of Baselbieter Arlesheim said that they opened a "thought crime" case against a prominent Swiss writer and history researcher Bernhard Schaub for unbelieving in the jewish "holocaust" myth, and the "criminal" will be probably tried in a court.
Simultaneously, to make things sure, the political police of the Swiss canton Solothurn also opened a criminal "investigation" against the writer. The police stated that the writer said in leaflet that in National Socialist Germany jews died not of gas but of typhus, like several million Germans did. Saying so is a very serious crime in modern democratic Switzerland, the Swiss TV Channel SF reported.
In his world-famous book "Eagle and Rose,"published in 1992, Bernhard Schaub wrote that there had never been any alleged "mass extermination of jews" in Germany. At that rather peaceful time, the "holocaust" myth deniers were not yet put in prison but persecuted in a "softer" way. The writer lost his job as Professor of History and German Language in the famous Rudolf Steiner's Academy in Waldorf. The outstanding writer was one of the first history researchers to cite in his book the results of the investigation of the famous technical expert Fred Leuchter who proved that the operation of so-called "gas chambers" was absolutely impossible even from a pure technical point of view.
In August 2003, a gang of "holocaust" myth believers and preachers attacked the writer in the street with wooden sticks and started to beat him shouting "Nazi, get out". Two policeman were standing nearby, observed the beating and did not interfere. The writer managed to escape but the beating squad antifascist members stole his wallet with personal papers and money he had just withdrew from his bank account.
Returning to his car at a parking place he found that the car was completely destroyed by the gang of "holocast" myth preachers, windows crashed and tires cut.
Surely, the police surely never found the gangsters as in all similar cases of attacks on dissidents by politically correct persons by in the West.
Agencies