France: Anti-Terror Officer Charged with Selling Data and Fake Documents on the Dark Web

Spartacus
Daily Stormer
January 23, 2020

We don’t have a name or photo of the perp, but he must be a “New Frenchman,” because he chose a monkey in a suit as his lawyer.

A White criminal would’ve been smart enough to get a White lawyer.

The Local:

An anti-terrorism agent in France’s domestic intelligence service could soon face trial on charges of selling confidential data and fake IDs in the hidden corners of the internet, prosecutors say.

Investigators wrapped up their investigation last week into the alleged sales by “Haurus”, the code name for the DGSI officer, now 33, who was arrested in September 2018.

His partner and four of his clients, including a private detective, have also been charged in the inquiry.

I don’t even understand why they’re charging him for this.

The French government – along with all the other ZOG-controlled countries – are letting millions of these vermin just waltz into their countries illegally. How’s that more legal than what this guy was doing?

Investigators became suspicious after France’s OCRIEST agency, charged with stopping illegal immigration, noticed offers of unusually detailed personal information and “Gold” quality copies of official documents on the so-called dark net, which offers users total anonymity.

Haurus charged €100 to €300 or more for fake identification cards, driver’s licences or birth certificates, as well as bank documents, phone records or GPS coordinates for tracking specific individuals.

“You provide the identity/registration number to copy, or your own requests, and I’ll find what you need,” read one message from Haurus on the Blackhand v2 forum, according to details of the investigation seen by AFP.

Haurus even touted a “starter pack” of a French driver’s licence, an ID card and six blank cheques, for €500 euros instead of €680.

Becoming a frog is really cheap these days, isn’t it?

But if having a few pieces of paper is all you need, why not sell them in the first place?

An investigation found that 90 percent of the agent’s internal information requests had nothing to do with his work, and that he and his partners were enjoying the high life, staying in ritzy hotels on numerous vacations.

More alarming, Le Parisien newspaper reported that a former thief imprisoned on drug charges bought tracking data from Haurus on three people – two of whom were later murdered, while the third survived an attempt on his life.

This sounds like the kind of stuff a competent state apparatus would notice very quickly.

Haurus spent five months in prison before being released under judicial supervision.

His lawyer, Yassine Bouzrou, declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

This is his lawyer:

You can tell he’s French by looking at his papers.

Because that’s all it takes.