Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Redheaded hot-head Mark Colbourne was convicted Tuesday in London of plotting a neo-Nazi terror attack to kill Prince Charles.


The ginger is guilty.
Redheaded hot-head Mark Colbourne was convicted Tuesday in London of plotting a neo-Nazi terror attack to kill Prince Charles.
Colbourne, 37, showed no reaction when a jury handed down a conviction months after an initial trial earlier this year ended with no verdict, The Guardian reported.
“It is a strange case involving, if I may say it, a very strange person,” Judge John Bevan said in Old Bailey.
The Southampton hatemonger had said he felt “belittled by society” for being a red-haired, white male, and wanted to assassinate Prince Charles with a sniper rifle so fellow redhead Prince Harry could take his place, prosecutors said.
In writings uncovered by police, Colbourne compared himself to Anders Breivik, the extreme right-wing monster in Norway who slaughtered 77 people in a 2011 anti-Islam terror attack. Colbourne said he needed to carry out his carnage “for the Aryan people.”
“I will put a major dent in England, one that is felt around the world,” he wrote.
CORRECTING NAME IN CAPTIONDANIEL SANNUM LAUTEN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

In his writing, Mark Colbourne compared himself to Anders Breivik (r,), the Norway terrorist who killed 77 people in 2011.

“If for some reason I cannot perform a major operation, then I will still opt for low-level attacks...I’m looking for major retribution, a mass terrorist attack which will bring to the attention our pain — not just mine but my brothers’ around the world.”
He stockpiled chemicals and explosives in his family home, and read up online about making bombs and poisons before his family noticed the sinister stash in his messy bedroom and blew him in to police last June.
Colbourne’s lawyer argued that the wannabe terrorist was depressed, agoraphobic and had “a troubled childhood” filled with teasing and torment. Colbourne told jurors his writings were “angry rants” he penned while off his medication for depression.
Jurors decided he wasn’t planning to use the chemicals for an attack, and acquitted him of those charges, but still took his terror plans seriously.
He will be sentenced in November.

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