Finnish Man Jailed in U.S. for “Thought-Crime”

U.S. Federal authorities arrest Henrik Holappa, a Finnish nationalist for vocally opposing the African invasion of his country.

There are nearly twenty million illegal immigrants in the United Statestoday, by moderate estimates. Many of them are convicted felons, drugdealers, gang members, thieves, and murderers or rapists, or childmolesters. ICE and the federal immigration authorities claim that they don’thave the manpower or resources to track them down and deport them.However, they do apparently have the time to investigate, surveil,follow, and arrest white people who are here in our country seekingpolitical asylum from oppression they have faced in nations which donot have a first amendment “freedom of speech” guarantee…all attaxpayer expense. More..Henrik is a FinnishNationalist residing in Pennsylvania seeking asylum to escape politicalprosecution in Finland where he was charged with a hate crime. He wascharged with a hate crime for an article that he published onlinecriticizing the increasing gang rapes of Finnish women by Africanimmigrants. Despite taking the necessary legal steps to gaincitizenship in the U.S., on Monday March 9th he was arrested and iscurrently being held in York, Pennsylvania, where he will most likelybe deported and imprisoned for his article. More information willfollow, along with some possible actions being taken, so keep your eyesopen.

Esa Henrik Holappa # A87361909
York County Jail Immigration Facility
3400 Concord Road
York PA 17402

Statement of Henrik Holappa:
I have been persecutedby the government (army, police, prosecutors), the mass media, and anemployer in my country starting on August 8, 2006, when the securitypolice, the SUPO, visited my apartment, which I shared with my sisterNatalija, and then my school, asking both her and me many questions andwarning me to abandon my beliefs — or else I would lose my prospectsof ever being a security guard, and also be “unwelcome in Germany,” acountry I intended to visit.Then the Finnish police obviouslynotified all Finnish security companies that I should not be employedeven as a security guard. I found no one would hire me, although I hadgraduated from the security guard school Osakk on August 25, 2006. Thesecurity company ISS had verbally promised me employment guardingUniversity Hospital in Oulu, but at the end of October 2006 it suddenlyhad no record or file at all of my job application and two-hourinterview on October 9, 2006. So I lost that career possibility.Forcenturies, my family has honorably served Finland in military service,under Swedish, Russian and Finnish governments, and both mygrandfathers fought against the Soviets in WWII; many of my father’scousins fell for Finland’s freedom in the war. Both grandfatherssuffered greatly in the war, and one never quite recovered from Sovietcaptivity, suffered severe depression and died in his forties. It wastherefore extremely painful to me as an patriotic Finn to be in effectdishonorably discharged on September 6, 2007 from the Finnish ArmyReserve solely because of my political views. My reservist duty was tobe renewed in January 2008.

I had considered a full-timemilitary career before that, and in fact had left high school to jointhe army out of love of military service; this career was now alsodestroyed.The police came to my apartment on Tuesday, January16, 2007, at 3:20 pm, and ransacked it, throwing things on the floor,and seized both my computers (returning them three days later.) Theythen went to my parents’ home, where I was raised as a child, and thecriminal police officer Sari Isometsa Tihinen (whose business card isenclosed with my application) threatened my mother that –I was “in big trouble,” that–“Henrik might not come home for a long time,” and that–if I pursued my beliefs, I “would not have any part in our society.” Iwas in police custody for 24 hours at the Oulu police station that sameday in a concrete cell with the lights burning day and night, onsuspicion of sending a photograph or writing an article, bothunprovable charges, and I was not allowed to make any phone calls.After the 24 hours I was told that I was now under arrest, and spenttwo more days in that cell with nothing to read or do, incommunicado,without visitors, and with no phone call to anyone. The police told mymother that I was under arrest. I was released without charges on the19th.When I emerged from jail, I discovered that the mainnewspaper in northern Finland, Kaleva, had violated on the day of mydetention, January 16, the Finnish press custom of never reporting thename of a suspect, even a murder suspect, under the presumption ofinnocence, until he had been actually convicted at the end of a trial.However, the article mentioned me by my name in the very firstparagraph, and stated falsely as a proven fact that I had written acertain article in December 2006.

It was an article denouncinggangs of African rapists of my countrywomen of whom many were and arestill running around un-arrested in my city. The article highlightedthe infamous “scissor rapists” — Sudanese black Africans whoclitorectomized a Finnish female rape victim with scissors in June 2005in Oulu and were sentenced to three years in prison in January 2006.The author asked why Finland was bringing in such immigrants and whythere were no subsequent arrests for the other African gang rapistsstill terrorizing my city. (Finland itself has no history of gang rapeamong the native Finns.)The media article also stated as factthe unproven assertion that I had sent off a clipped newspaper photo toAmerica – as a serious “copyright violation” — and the lie that whileliving in Oulu as a young Finn without any website skills, I was “thewebmaster” of an American website.This was obviously acoordinated campaign by the Finnish government, police and media, alltogether, to make me a hated person to both leftist Finns and to thevery Somali and Sudanese gang rapists who then, as now, are on theloose in the city of my birth. (There have been no prosecutions ofAfrican gang rapists there since the scissors rapists were convicted inJanuary 2006, 33 months ago, although the problem continues and theseimmigrants stand out memorably by their appearance to both theirvictims and the public in my Scandinavian country.) There arealso many black immigrants, all Muslim Africans, in my apartmentbuilding, who live on my street and in my neighborhood, and they canknow who I am, because the main newspaper in all of northern Finland,Kaleva, with a daily circulation of 300,000, used my name. They canafford this newspaper because they can get up to 3,000 euros a month inwelfare for a family, while an unemployed Finn can get only 400 euros amonth.

The security police, SUPO, could even remind the African Muslim communities of my name and address.OnMay 11 or 12, 2008 I received a phone call while visiting neighboringEstonia from the same Sari Tihinen, asking me when I could come to thepolice station in Oulu. She further informed me over the telephone thatthe top prosecutor in Finland, Mika Illman, whose name suggests Jewishancestry and thus animus toward me, had “dug up [my] case again.”OnTuesday, May 20, 2008 this same policewoman further warned me, now atthe Oulu police station, that I was to be indicted by the government ofFinland on three serious charges so as to “make an example of me for other racists in Finland,” as follows:1)two years imprisonment for “incitement of racial hatred” [sic] 2)two years behind bars for “defaming the honor of the African community of Finland” [sic]; and 3)sixmonths imprisonment for “copyright violation.” (I had merely scanned aphoto of “multiculturalism” from a Finnish newspaper, and sent it as aprivate email attachment to an American friend. He then, unbeknownst tome, posted it on an American website.)

I believe I wastargeted because the Finnish authorities hate my views and see me as ayoung leader whose crushing would preclude any political movement Icould start. (I have never started any movement; I only turned 23 in July.) Iam sure that the Finnish government would harm me on my return byarresting me and prosecuting me, and putting me in prison next toSomali and Turkish felons who might hate me and seek to beat, rape orkill me. The Finnish government would itself be my main persecutor, andmight not protect me at all in prison. In fact, it might invite inmatesto get a sentence reduction if they harmed me. They might alsoput me, as an “extremely dangerous person” (the policewoman’s words tome and to members of the True Finns political party of which I was oncea member) in a maximum security prison where I would be shut up in acell for 23 hours a day. This is a form of severe mental harm,especially for an innocent person who deserves no punishment.TheFinnish government is modern and controls all the territory of Finland,so there is no place in my country where I could hide for long.Furthermore, all other European Union countries have laws similar toFinland’s and would arrest me on a European Union arrest warrant toextradite me back to Finland or to any other EU country that objects tomy views.

Just one week ago, Dr. Fredrick Toeben, an Australian,was arrested by British detectives on the runway of Heathrow Airportnear London on an EU arrest warrant issued in Mannheim, Germany. Hisplane from the USA to Dubai had merely landed there to refuel anddischarge some passengers. The German prosecutor said he feared aGerman “could” read Toeben’s English-language Australian website. Ileft Finland by plane and flew via Iceland to the United States on July11, 2008. I came here as a bona fide tourist, but decided toward theend of my tourist stay that I loved America, its people, its beauty andits freedom of speech and that I did not want to be imprisoned andpossibly murdered in Finland.

“To attempt to silence a man is to pay him homage, for it is an acknowledgment that his arguments are both impossible to answer andimpossible to ignore.” —JBR Yant

2009-03-13