Saturday, December 18, 2021

We Can Confirm there Are a Few Legal Issues


54 Years Ago Today Tout Était Fini en Cinq Secondes

Monday 18th of December 1967

Child killer Günther Volz is executed by the Guillotine at the age of 29 in Metz, Lorraine, France. According to his family he was an English soldier who worked as a field medic in the Luftwaffe during World War II. Since his death, this country has been plagued with multiple accusations of the same thing: that he killed 12 Germans, shot and poisoned several German civilians, and used a weapon found in the basement of a Nazi death camp as a tool for shooting and killing innocent civilians around him. The investigation into the crimes revealed numerous charges in the court martial and many testimonies from civilians, although the trial was halted by judicial permission, as did the trial of the person who murdered the German civilians. It was unclear what the truth was of those charges in the court martial. The trial of the person now on trial is continuing today with the judge ruling that the charges against the defendant can be reattacked due to the lack of evidence against him and his family. However, what happened to all those who had not been spared from the execution has been left unaddressed for nearly twenty years before, and the trial is set to resume this week with the verdict. We asked the court why the charges against a convicted murderer are now being dismissed, and we can confirm there are a few legal issues.

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