Germany holds renowned freedom advocate in solitary confinement

German authorities are holding German-American attorney Dr. Reiner Fuellmich in solitary confinement for his investigations into the COVID-19 pandemic, sources say.

Fuellmich, a trial lawyer with a residence in California, is the founder of the International Crimes Investigative Committee (ICIC). The committee focuses on investigating and exposing human rights abuses committed by governments during the pandemic.

Fuellmich’s act of war

During California’s lockdowns in 2020, Fuellmich began to suspect a scandal and launched a probe into the “responses” by governments around the world to the coronavirus. He conducted over 400 interviews and met with over 150 experts in various fields, including fellow lawyer and physician Dr. Simone Gold. 

According to Fuellmich’s findings, 95% of PCR tests had been generating false positives and creating infection “cases” that were not there. They were being used to create the illusion of a pandemic.

After probing further, Fuellmich concluded that citizens around the world are facing an enemy called “Mr. Global,” which is Fuellmich’s term for the powerful alliance between globalist governments, corporations, and organizations such as the World Economic Forum.

“This is not the Russians against the Americans, Black against White, women against men, or the vaccinated against the unvaccinated,” he said. “Instead, it is all of us humans against the monstrous criminals that are doing everything they can to drive us against each other so that our attention is distracted from their evil doings.”

Fuellmich, along with three other lawyers, had earlier established another committee, the Corona Investigative Committee (CIC) in Berlin, to investigate the human rights abuses being perpetrated under the pretext of coronavirus. He knew that his outspoken activism made him a target of the German government. 

Betrayal

Fuellmich and Viviane Fischer, one of the CIC’s co-founders, took a series of financial steps to protect the donations the organization had received from being seized by German authorities. They purchased a million euros worth of gold and took out personal loans to secure the funds: Fischer borrowed €100,000 ($110,933) and Fuellmich borrowed €700,000 ($776,531). While Fischer paid her loan back in installments, Fuellmich decided to sell his home in Germany, valued at €1,350,000 ($1.5 million), to pay back the loan.

He authorized Fischer’s partner, a lawyer named Marcel Templin, to facilitate the sale of his house. According to Malone.news, the money from the sale ended up in Templin’s bank account, precluding Fuellmich from paying back the loan. This would later serve as the foundation for an embezzlement charge. 

Fuellmich had no idea at the time that Fischer had turned on him. His first clue came when she ousted him from the CIC in 2022. In response, Fuellmich founded the International Crimes Investigative Committee (ICIC).

Fuellmich was also unaware at the time that German authorities had already placed him under surveillance in 2021. According to a dossier his lawyer later obtained, the government had vowed to stop him at all costs and discussed “infiltrating him amongst his closest collaborators.” Higher-ups wanted Reiner barred from ever seeking public office.

Arrested and imprisoned

Over the next few months, a series of events — including denial of entry by the US government — drove Fuellmich to Mexico. There, under the pretense of providing Fuellmich and his wife with new passports, the German government had him arrested and transported back to Germany. 

Fuellmich was arrested upon his arrival and charged with 18 crimes, of which only the charge of embezzlement remains. For nearly 11 months since, he has been held in a maximum security prison in Göttingen and repeatedly subjected to solitary confinement while his trial inches along. Eleven months of pre-trial detention is five more than German law allows. In special cases, pre-trial detention may be extended to no more than 12 months.

A sham trial

When Göttingen’s public prosecutor investigated Fuellmich, he found there was insufficient evidence to convict him. He was soon replaced by a younger public prosecutor identified as “John,” who had been transferred to Göttingen from Hanover. 

In communications that have since been obtained by Fuellmich’s lawyer Dr. Christof Miseré, John privately expressed surprise at the “dirty job” done to Fuellmich by Fischer and her associates.

Judge Carsten Schindler has reportedly already decided that Fuellmich is guilty, saying he intends to convict him at all costs and has no need to hear other witnesses for the defense.

Schindler’s conclusion is based almost entirely on Fischer’s testimony, while the multiple testimonies to Reiner’s innocence appear to have made no impact on the judge.

Solitary confinement

For nearly three months now, Reiner has been in solitary confinement, which has been used repeatedly as a form of abuse and to isolate him from allies.

On May 5th, Fuellmich’s birthday, a crowd of his supporters gathered outside the prison in Rosdorf. They assembled from 1:30 PM to 2:30 PM when they knew he would be out in the prison yard. With flags and signs, they cheered, sang songs, and played music. They only found out later that prison authorities had placed Fuellmich in solitary confinement, not allowing him to hear the crowd’s support.

Fuellmich recently had an opportunity to briefly leave the prison to visit his mother, who lay dying. He submitted a request of leave to prison authorities, who granted it with the proviso that he remain shackled and escorted the entire time. Fuellmich, unwilling to subject his mother to such a sight, chose to remain in the prison facility. His mother died on Monday.

The trial continues and it is suspected that Judge Schindler will, at the end, grant the prosecution’s request to imprison Fuellmich for three years and nine months.

‘They picked the absolute worst person’

“Reiner’s story has affected me deeply,” said Dr. Simon Gold, founder of America’s Frontline Doctors and a friend of Fuellmich. “It’s incredibly painful to watch this happen to a friend, particularly a fellow warrior who has devoted his life to fighting corruption.”

Dr. Gold added that “Mr. Global” is using Fuellmich to send a message.

“It’s telling us to stand down, to stop fighting the agenda, and to drop this fantasy we call freedom. We’re supposed to accept the new world order where science is dictated by governments and anything to the contrary is wrongthink.”

The physician added, however, that Fuellmich continues to inspire even behind bars.

“The part that brings me joy is that they picked the absolute worst person to deliver that message,” she added. “I know Reiner Fuellmich, and he couldn’t bend the knee even if he wanted to. What is there to say about someone who would rather sit in solitary confinement than cause his mother anguish?”