Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Christian Brueckner a Long Time Thief, Drug Dealer, Pedophile and Rapist Murdered Tender Aged Child Madeleine McCann

Beach Bum Christian Brueckner a Long Time Thief, Drug Dealer, Pedophile and Rapist Murdered Tender Aged Child Madeleine McCann. Blonde 4 year old (3 years 11 months) Madeleine Beth McCann disappeared on the evening of 3 May 2007, just 9 days prior to her 4th birthday on May 12th, from her bed in a holiday apartment at a resort in Praia da Luz, in the Algarve region of Portugal. Madeleine was on holiday from the UK with her parents, Kate and Gerry McCann; her two-year-old twin siblings; and a group of family friends and their children. She and the twins had been left asleep at 8:30 in the ground-floor apartment, while the McCanns and friends dined in a restaurant 55 metres (180 ft) away. Child rapist Christian Brueckner a Long Time Thief, Drug Dealer, Pedophile and Rapist Murdered Tender Aged Child Madeleine McCann was living nearby in Praia da Luz and driving a second hand purple Jaguar XJR 6. Christian Brückner, the man identified as a suspect in the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, had his first sexual assault conviction as a teenager. In 1994, when just a teenager, he was convicted in his homeland of Germany of sexual abuse of a child, attempted sexual abuse of a child, and carrying out sexual acts in front of a child. The following year, as an 18-year-old who had just got his driving licence, he fled Germany for Portugal with a girlfriend to escape the youth custody sentence he had received. 

In 2004 Christian Brückner a thief and burglar was living in Praia da Luz and would enter apartments and hotel rooms when guests were at dinner. Brückner told close friends how he went after “tourist shit” like cameras, video cameras, passports, wallets or loose change, sometimes entering apartments while the occupants were taking a siesta or during the night. During the year of Madeleine McCann’s disappearance – two years after the rape – he was living in Praia da Luz, and he had been having relationships with various women over the years, including from Portugal and Germany, the court documents say. He was dating an English woman between 2004 and 2005, according to the documents, where her name has been crossed out. In more than 25 years, he flitted between the two countries, often escaping various criminal proceedings against him for the sexual abuse of children, but also drug-dealing, falsifying documents and driving without insurance. In 1999 the police caught up with Brückner for his early offenses, and he was returned to Germany to sit out his youth custody sentence. He returned to Portugal as soon as he could, earning enough money to buy a second hand Jaguar, a purple XJR 6, which has now been seized by German police and is one of the objects at the center of the investigation into Madeleine’s disappearance. In June 2017 he was arrested again and returned to Germany for a sentence of 15 months in prison for the sexual abuse of a child. After his release from prison, he found himself homeless and said he felt persecuted by the police who followed his every move, even as he slept on a park bench, he said. The man now identified as Brückner was described as a murder suspect. Investigators, the presenter said, “believe they know who Madeleine’s murderer is. They suspect a previously convicted German sexual offender of abducting the three-year-old. There is a lot of circumstantial evidence against the man.

Once a pedophile always a pedophile. 43-year-old child rapist Christian Brueckner is currently serving a 21-month sentence for drug trafficking in the German city of Kiel. If the separate case had been thrown out by the court, Brueckner would have been released when his current sentence is due to end on 7 January 2021. Girls' swimwear and 8,000 child abuse images were found by police investigating Madeleine McCann suspect Christian Brueckner, who has denied involvement in her disappearance. His lawyer Friedrich Fulscher said he has spoken to the convicted rapist who is currently in solitary confinement in a German jail.But he refused to say anything further beyond the denial as it emerged police found items of children’s clothing, including several girls’ swimsuits, in a Tiffin Allegro motor home that Brueckner used in Germany. Six USB sticks with 8,000 vile child abuse images were also found among the bones of a dead dog at his derelict home in Germany. German prosecutor Hans Christian Wolter confirmed he had written to the couple saying that Madeleine is dead – but without revealing how this was known. The McCanns said they had not yet received the letter.



Bill Warner Private Investigator Sarasota 941-926-1926 - Cheaters and Child Custody Cases at http://www.wbipi.com/

Monday, April 26, 2021

Sarasota Judge Williams Refutes Newtown Residents Outrage at Marker to Recognize Lynchings, 331 Black Men Were Lynched in Florida

Sarasota Judge Williams Refutes Newtown Residents Outrage at Marker to Recognize Lynchings as 331 Black Men Were Lynched in Florida. Newspapers of the times trivialized the barbaric lynching of black men in Bradenton and Haines City Fl. The Tampa Times in 1913 called murdered Sam White aka Joe Bell a "Lustful Negro" after a mob of white men shot him to pieces and then hung his body in Haines City Fl. The Orlando Evening Star in 1912 wrote that negro Willie English was shot to death and hung in Bradenton Fl as a "warning to others of his kind" for propositioning a young white girl.  April 25, 2021 Sarasota Judge Williams writes in Herald Tribune: As part of a coalition of supporters involved in attempting to recognize the lives and legacies of lynching victims in this area – murdered individuals whose names remain largely forgotten and whose stories remain largely untold – I read with dismay a Sarasota Herald-Tribune story featuring quotes from some Newtown residents who spoke during a recent city commission meeting, scores of Newtown residents urged city leaders to block the project. First, some technical corrections are necessary: There is no “lynching museum” being proposed for Newtown. There is no “lynching sculpture” being contemplated portraying lynching victims. What is being proposed is a simple marker that recognizes the fact that there were lynchings in this area – and provides the names and circumstances of the victims. The comments by the citizens of Newtown who spoke against a memorial reveal the very reasons why it is so important to preserve and understand the history of lynching in America.

Reuben Stacy, a 37-year-old black man, hangs from a tree on Old Davie Road in Fort Lauderdale, blood trickling down his body and dripping off his toes. Behind him, a white girl, about 7 years old, looks on, a strange smile on her face as she takes in the sight of the "strange fruit" her elders had just created that hot day in July 1935. Stacy was accused of attempting to assault a white woman in her home after first asking for a glass of water. According to a 1993 telling of the story, he was arrested three days later 25 miles from the scene. But no trial was ever conducted, and mere hours after his arrest, Stacy was hanged and shot. The infamous photograph of Stacy's death might be one of the few visual accounts of a lynching in Florida, but a new report from the Equal Justice Initiative about lynching across the American South reminds us that the Sunshine State was among the most brutal in the country when it come to race-fueled executions of black people. Per capita, Floridians lynched at a higher rate than any other state. 

Between 1877 and 1950, the report, Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror, counts 3,959 examples of "racial terror lynchings," which EJI describes as violent, public acts of torture that were tolerated by public officials and designed to intimidate black victims. Of the 12 states analyzed, Florida ranked fifth, with 331 terror lynchings within its borders. Per capita, however, Florida ranks first, with 0.594 lynchings for every 100,000 residents. Of the 25 counties across the South with the most lynchings, Florida has six: Orange (34), Marion (30), Alachua (19), Polk (19), Columbia (17), and Taylor (17). "Many people are under the wrong impression that the majority of lynchings were black males assaulting white females, but most were because black men and women were accused of stealing," University of Florida professor Jack Davis, who has written about Florida lynchings, tells New Times. Davis adds that other historical accounts back up Florida's reputation as a lynching capital.



Bill Warner Private Investigator Sarasota 941-926-1926 - Cheaters and Child Custody Cases at http://www.wbipi.com/