Shootings at Crocus City Hall in Moscow
-
ETA: Give 'em a fair trial and then hang them.
There’s talk of bringing back the death penalty over this. Won’t be hanging though.
Sudden, explosive acute lead poisoning at the base of the skull is the method of choice. That is if the condemned survives what the guards and other inmates subject him to in lieu of a last meal.
-
@Horace said in Shootings at Crocus City Hall in Moscow:
I don’t think we’re allowed to think authoritarianism has any positive aspects.
Yeah, having a suspect lose an eye during interrogation just screams 'due process'.
How will we ever know whether he is guilty or not if they beat him to death getting a confession?
-
The due process afforded them was the offer that the beatings and torture would stop when they admitted they were reporting to and in the pay of the Ukrainians. That they would only admit truthfully that they were fanatic Muslims engaged in jihad and Tajik citizens was not what the boss wanted to hear so their dismal fates were summarily sealed.
-
Putin admits Islamic jihadist fanatics undertook the attack but insists Washington and Kyiv were supporting the terrorist action:
He’s sticking with his own conspiracy theory script.
@Copper said in Shootings at Crocus City Hall in Moscow:
The ear paired with fava beans is available at an additional cost.
I think the OMON police dog enjoyed the ear without any garnishes or side dishes.
-
Seems that the Kremlin Pinocchio’s nose might be growing even longer. Lukashenko says the four terrorists attempted to enter but were stopped from entering Belarus.
Russian officials, including Putin himself, have since claimed the men were caught driving toward Ukraine.
But in comments that go against Moscow’s claims, Lukashenko suggested that the suspects had initially tried to cross into Belarus, where they were met by heightened security measures.
-
Putin said that the warnings that the US sent about a possible terrorist attack were not specific.
More than two weeks before terrorists staged a bloody attack in the suburbs of Moscow, the U.S. government told Russian officials that Crocus City Hall, a popular concert venue, was a potential target, according to U.S. officials familiar with the matter.
The high degree of specificity conveyed in the warning underscores Washington’s confidence that the Islamic State was preparing an attack that threatened large numbers of civilians, and it directly contradicts Moscow’s claims that the U.S. warnings were too general to help preempt the assault.
The U.S. identification of the Crocus concert hall as a potential target — a fact that has not been previously reported — raises new questions about why Russian authorities failed to take stronger measures to protect the venue, where gunmen killed more than 140 people and set fire to the building. A branch of the Islamic State has taken credit for the attack, the deadliest in Russia in 20 years. U.S. officials have publicly said the group, known as Islamic State-Khorasan, or ISIS-K, “bears sole responsibility,” but Russian President Vladimir Putin has tried to pin the blame on Ukraine.
The attack has further dented the image of strength and security that the Russian leader seeks to convey and exposed fundamental weaknesses in the nation’s security apparatus, which has been consumed by more than two years of war in Ukraine. Domestically, Putin’s operatives appear more concerned with silencing political dissent and opposition to the president than rooting out terrorist plots, according to analysts and observers of Russian politics.
The Russian leader himself publicly dismissed U.S. warnings just three days before the March 22 attack, calling them “outright blackmail” and attempts to “intimidate and destabilize our society.”