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Trial Prosecuting Murderous Freemason Criminal Network Begins In France

Hol

Well-known
Freemasonry has long been seen as the invisible hand guiding the course of human history. While that history is replete with examples of Freemasons configuring the architecture of society, the inner machinations of its influence have largely been shrouded in secrecy. Although Freemasonry and other secret societies have remained adept at shielding the public from having a perspective on the immense influence they wield, seminal moments throughout history have been able to cast some light through the shadows they hide behind. From the publication of John Robison’s monumental 1797 anti-Masonic polemic Proofs of a Conspiracy to the Morgan Affair, which saw the Anti-Masonic Party become the first third party to be elected to U.S. Congress, to the Taxil “Hoax,” which revealed the perverse occult philosophies at the root of Freemasonry, to iconoclastic American journalist Alex Jones sneaking into Bohemian Grove and capturing its Cremation of Care ritual on video, the thread that has sewn the veil of secrecy those esoteric orders hide behind has incrementally unraveled more and more with each subsequent revelation.

The latest episode revealing the extent of the power and influence that secret societies still hold has begun to unfold in France, following the start of a trial exposing a network operating out of a Freemason lodge just outside of Paris that served as the epicenter of a vast criminal conspiracy reaching some of the highest echelons of the French government, from its police forces to its intelligence agencies.

Twenty-two defendants allegedly involved in a criminal conspiracy based out of the Athanor Freemason Lodge located in the Paris suburb of Puteaux face charges ranging from criminal conspiracy to murder. Of those 22 defendants whose ages span from 30 to 72 years old, four of them are Freemasons initiated into the lodge. The defendants include four former officers within France’s Direction Générale de la Sécurité Extérieure (“DGSE”) foreign intelligence service, a retired domestic intelligence agent, three police officers, six business executives, a security guard, a doctor, and an engineer.

 
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