My Political Asylum Application In Germany, November 2002 to August 2005 Main




Results In A Nutshell
  • Level of harassment/torture:
    • "Electronic" harassment generally the same. At times much worse.
    • Surreptitious drugging and drugging of food in living quarters continued.
    • Direct attacks while I was asleep or otherwise vulnerable continued, perhaps worse.
  • Asylum or Immigration:
    • Asylum is impossible (at least without a good lawyer).
    • Immigration is possible.
  • Medical treatment to have implanted torture devices removed:
    • Offered to me when I spoke to the "Polizeibehoerde" in Karlsruhe. The official I spoke with explicitly offered medical treatment to have implanted devices removed, albeit possibly "off the record". Medical treatment was also offered by the German official who reviewed by asylum application in Karlsruhe. I didn't accept treatment, for reasons why see below.
      • Victim must pay for travel expenses to Germany. My return travel expenses were paid for by a charitable organization.
      • Housing and living expenses are covered by the German government.

How to get help

From my experiences you won't find refuge in Germany, but you can get free medical treatment to have implanted devices removed.

To take advantage of this, you need (a passport obviously, and) to book a flight to Germany. Make sure that once your flight departs the United States (assuming you are a US resident) it does not stop at any third country before arriving in Germany. Otherwise the German authorities may try to return you to that third country, especially if it is a European country, for reason that you should have sought asylum there and not continued on to Germany.

From my experience, you can book your flight one-way. After you have gotten medical treatment, if you want to return to the United States, your return flight will be paid for by a charitable organization. The social worker assigned to you can take care of this.

When you arrive in Germany, at some point you will be asked to present your passport and state your purpose. At this point you may be able to request political asylum in Germany.

Make certain you ask for political asylum, because that is all Germany offers. Asylum on humanitarian grounds is not available. In my case I have noticed that my torturers try to aversely condition me against engaging in political activity to expose this kind of abuse in the United States. Increasing the level of torture to discourage me from speaking out is clearly a violation of my rights to political expression, and this was the basis of my own claim for political asylum in Germany. If you don't say "political", German authorities will say that they cannot help you.

But maybe you aren't able to ask for asylum at your port of entry:

  • You might feel unable to speak out. It feels pretty weird, as an American, to be asking for political asylum in Germany, especially while in line, and within the hearing, of your fellow travellers.
  • Authorities should respect your request, even though you are an American, and I have no reason to think that they wouldn't. But it might happen that the offical at your point of entry doesn't respond appropriately to your request for political asylum.

There is another option. You can go directly to a Federal Asylum Center and make your request for political asylum there. In fact German law may state that the request must be made there, and other officials only guide you there as a courtesy.

Unfortunately, Germany doesn't make great efforts to publicize the locations of the Federal Asylum Centers. Luckily, I happen to know the exact address and location of the one in Karlsruhe, because that is the one I was initially processed at myself:

  • Durlacher Allee 100
    76137 Karlsruhe
    Germany

The following map shows the path you'd walk to get there from the Weinweg S-Bahn stop in Karlsruhe (link):

In the above map, the green arrow is the location Google Maps associates with the address Durlacher Allee 100, which is slightly off.

The map below is zoomed in to more clearly show the actual main entrance to the Federal Asylum Center in Karlsruhe (link):

Once you have requested political asylum and are lodged in the Federal Asylum Center, from my experience you can go to the Polizeibehoerde and ask for help in getting medical care. In Karlsruhe, the official I spoke with had an office in the same building in Karlsruhe where visa applications are processed. Unfortunately I don't remember the location. I approached the visa people, and they sent me to the Polizeibehoerde in the same building.

In my case, I actually first spoke with the Kriminalpolizei in Karlsruhe, and told them that I was being attacked with directed energy weapons. The Kriminalpolizei then referred me to the Polizeibehoerde.

  • Kriminalpolizei -- Criminal police, deal with more serious, organized types of criminal activity.
  • Polizeibehoerde -- Police authority. Not sure eactly what they are, but they said they could arrange for me to receive medical care.

You can also wait until you have your interview with the German offical charged with deciding your asylum application. In my experience, this official will also offer you medical treatment. Most asylum applicants have this interview about two weeks after they arrive, although in my case it took about six weeks before I had my interview.

If you accept medical care, you won't have to pay for it. Keep in mind that this kind of abuse is going on in Germany as well, as described further below.. So I would think that there is some risk that the doctors who would treat you might themselves be complicit in these programs of involuntary human experimentation.

Once you are ready to leave Germany, from my experience whoever is currently assigned as your social worker can arrange a return air ticket for you, if you cannot pay for one yourself. (I think that if you are able to make a significant contribution, you will be expected to pay what you are able.)


Asylum Application Final Result: I voluntarily gave up my apeal and returned to the USA

Victims of "mind-control" harassment, whether it be with gang-stalking, clandestine drugging, implantation with torture devices, or targeting with microwave/radiowave beams and signals, are never able to escape their torturers by simply moving. So, what about leaving your country of residence entirely, and fleeing to a foreign country? I imagine there are some countries in which a victim might find refuge. However, Germany is not such a country. In fact, here is a web site put up by a victims' organization in Germany, the main page of which is titled "Mikrowellen Verbrechen", i.e. "Microwave Crime": http://mikrowellenterror.de . I doubt that any European country would be a safe-haven.

I continued to be tortured and harassed without interruption while I was in Germany, from November of 2002 until I finally gave up my appeal and returned to the USA in August 2005.

I stayed in Germany for so long because I thought that a ruling from a German court granting me asylum would help to expose this problem. I think it was after the mainstream media failed to investigate discrepancies between the offical count and the exit poll results in the 2004 election that it finally sunk in for me how controlled our news in America is, and how apathetic the public is. I realized that some kind of a public demand for an investigation, and help for the victims of this kind of abuse, is just not going to happen, no matter how much evidence there is.

There might be a chance for a victim to get their implants removed by applying for asylum in Germany. While I was in the German Federal asylum center in Karlsruhe, I complained to the Karlsruhe Kriminalpolizei about what was being done to me. I was referred to an official in the Polizeibehoerde. Strangely I only spoke to the secretary, who actually whispered that they could take out any implants that had been put into me, and that she could help me to get that kind of medical care. Who knows what they would really do, given that there are victims in Germany as well (see link above)? At the time I still had faith in the judicial systems in Western nations, so I thought I should have a good chance of winning my asylum case. The way she whispered the possibility of having my implants removed lead me to think that (at best) they would be removed under the pretext of a medical condition, which would have of course undermined my political asylum case.

The German federal offical who interviewed me and issued the original rejection of my ayslum application also mentioned the possibility of medical treatment, during my interview.


Documents related to my asylum application
 

Written statement
submitted December 11, 2002 for my asylum 
application. (MS Word format)
 

Decision
on my application from the German Federal Office for Recognition of Foreign Refugees. 

My application was rejected. I received the decision  November  2003.  Almost all asylum applications are rejected by the Federal Office.  Almost all who are eventually allowed to stay win their case on appeal.

The decision completely ignores my written statement above.  My interview protocol shows that I said I hadn't been given enough time to explain my case, and that it was therefore agreed I would be allowed to submit an additonal written statement.

This is one of the points I raise in my appeal, below.
 


Appeal part 1
My initial initial notification to the appeals court that I am appealing.  Submitted in December 2003.
 

Appeal part 2
(English version)

Reasons given in support of my appeal, submitted in January 2004. 




Information on German asylum laws / procedures


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