EPISODE 23

PUNISHMENT ON GANGSTALKING


Reread
CRIMINAL SOLDIER VRS LAW ABIDING SOLDIER

The Ghana laser man believes that criminals make better soldiers than law abiding people. He thinks the criminal that attacked and killed someone stealing his property is a better soldier because he has courage to do so. I say no.

The law abiding ones will inteprete the issues and bargain and bargain among themselves till till. If there is battle they fight hard for their bargain.

A criminal soldier is going to believe that there is a probability of he being attacked and begin his attack when noone thinks of attacking. He chooses most importantly to capture so that nation isn’t around to fight him that’s a criminal.

The law abiding soldier keep inventing devices to counter.

Now in a war, because a Criminal has trained himself to escape when he commits a crime, he will escape before the war begins. He isn’t even a peacekeeper.

The law abiding ones are always training. When you say there is war, THEY ONLY SIR SAY YES SIR, THEY ARE DULL PEOPLE.

IN A WAR YOU ARE TOLD THAT IF YOU DONT SHOOT YOU ARE DEAD, IT DOESN’T MATTER HOW DULL YOU ARE IN LIFE. YOU WILL SHOOT. YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE A HARD CRIMINAL TO SHOOT.

It’s only training that’s important. If you are placed in battle and the only option you have is to die if you don’t shoot, whether you are criminal or not, its only training that’s important. If you are immortal, you won’t shoot showing you are dull

Even in 1957, the British that had the opportunity, the sweet opportunity to have the opportunity to add most of the African nations to their personal property, decided to leave the continent for blacks. They could have killed every black in the jurisdiction or used them as slaves permanently. Because even as at now. If the black community are slaves of the white man. The black isn’t endowed to fight the white. But no they left to the motherland. This Ghana laser man is bevildered in all his ways. Now in 2024, see what this GLM is up to.

When you study crime cases of people that commit crimes. Almost all cases are a result of people who committed crimes becoming remorseful of their actions. Most of them won’t commit crimes if they were well to do.
Here is a beast of an illegal Ghana laser man who commit crimes rampantly thinking it is normal

Ghana laser man said: These people’s behavior is as though they are gods. Immediately you press the laser, they die

Me: if you think the act of being responsible, like taking care of your life, or kids looks like being a god, that’s how every human is. And we are all aware people die. You are a terrorist

The illegal Ghana laser man is an evil, wicked criminal that suffers from identity crisis. A primitive 1300addict. He thinks the reason you try to get things in order is that you feel you are a god. If you don’t feel you are a god, you won’t try getting things right. That’s how he sees when you go legal

How do you feel when we walk along the beach? You feel the breeze of cool winds. When you read a story at home or watch a movie, you feel a breeze or listening to music. The Ghana laser man uses the laser to remove the feeling or breeze when you involved in these things and microwave you with heat. First of all without the heat, no breeze, he then makes you weak then the heat microwave with the laser.
https://mkdmissions.home.blog/3080-2/
THE AMBRIGHT ENGINEERS FINAL EDIT LINK ABOVE
A BESTSELLER

REREAD,The wicked Ghana laser man is the most terrible person in history.
He causes intense fear for people with what they call hallucinations. Then he knocks them off with laser
He sets terrible weather conditions and causes dirt to smell good. When they decide to stay in a place they feel these conditions of heat, Apiah, that plant that causes you to itch and scratch yourself intensely. When they begin to travel by foot, it begins to look as though the conditions look better. Then he causes walk the city looking for good weather conditions. They then turn to think they are travellers in this world. They get so tired and nobody to help them.
HE TAKES ADVANTAGE OF MOST OF THEM NOT BEING EDUCATED TO TERRORISE THEM. AND OTHERS EDUCATED KEEP TALKING AND TALKING, because naturally they are neat and won’t make themselves dirty. He also picks their genetic codes.People watch all over the world from here and see them like how they really look like
People are lasered all over in the country to see them in the Ghana lasers eye definition of madness.The man insane looks of these people is laser. It isn’t real. When they watch them via satellites from space in the country, they don’t look so. If he does this to people many of them BROAD DAY LIGHT, HE KILLS MANY IN SECRET. These guys aren’t sick. They have the energy to keep walking about morning till evening.

Son of perdition, perdition means hell opposite= health/ freedomTHE BRIDE AGAINST THE MAN OF SIN.
THIS GHANA LASER MAN CARRIED LASER TO SHOW HIS WICKEDNESS lyfstyle he had BEFORE HE ENTERED INTO THE WORK.
VRS 3, VRS 9 (Laser magic), vrs8 the wicked

‭‭2 Thessalonians‬ ‭2:1‭-‬5‬ ‭KJV‬‬
[1] Now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, and by our gathering together unto him, [2] that ye be not soon shaken in mind, or be troubled, neither by spirit, nor by word, nor by letter as from us, as that the day of Christ is at hand. [3] Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition; [4] who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is God. [5] Remember ye not, that, when I was yet with you, I told you these things?
[7] For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth will let, until he ,9be taken out of the way. [8] And then shall that Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of his coming: [9] even him, whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders, [10] and with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. [11] And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: [12] that they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness. [13] But we are bound to give thanks alway to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord, because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth: [14] whereunto he called you by our gospel, to the obtaining of the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ. [15] Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle. [16] Now our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God, even our Father, which hath loved us, and hath given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace, [17] comfort your hearts, and stablish you in every good word and work.

Immortar

Laws on harassment and stalking

Australia

Every Australian state enacted laws prohibiting stalking during the 1990s, with Queensland being the first state to do so in 1994. The laws vary slightly from state to state, with Queensland’s laws having the broadest scope, and South Australian laws the most restrictive. Punishments vary from a maximum of 10 years imprisonment in some states, to a fine for the lowest severity of stalking in others. Australian anti-stalking laws have some notable features. Unlike many US jurisdictions they do not require the victim to have felt fear or distress as a result of the behaviour, only that a reasonable person would have felt this way. In some states, the anti-stalking laws operate extra-territorially, meaning that an individual can be charged with stalking if either they or the victim are in the relevant state. Most Australian states provide the option of a restraining order in cases of stalking, breach of which is punishable as a criminal offence. There has been relatively little research into Australian court outcomes in stalking cases, although Freckelton (2001) found that in the state of Victoria, most stalkers received fines or community based dispositions.[49]

Canada

Section 264 of the Criminal Code, titled “criminal harassment”,[50] addresses acts which are termed “stalking” in many other jurisdictions. The provisions of the section came into force in August 1993 with the intent of further strengthening laws protecting women.[51] It is a hybrid offence, which may be punishable upon summary conviction or as an indictable offence, the latter of which may carry a prison term of up to ten years. Section 264 has withstood Charter challenges.[52]

The Chief, Policing Services Program, for Statistics Canada has stated:[53]

… of the 10,756 incidents of criminal harassment reported to police in 2006, 1,429 of these involved more than one accused.

China

In China, simple stalking was treated as a kind of minor offence when it amounted to harassment, so stalkers were usually punished by a small fine or less than 10 days detention under the Public Security Administration Punishment Law.[54]

According to the Tort Liability Law, infringement of citizens’ privacy shall be subject to tort liability. For stalkers to spy on, secretly photograph, eavesdrop on or spread the privacy of others, under Article 42 of the Public Security Administration Punishment Law clearly stipulates that they can be detained for not more than five days or fined not more than five hundred yuan, and if the circumstances are more serious, they can be detained for not less than five days and not more than ten days, and can be fined not more than five hundred yuan.[54]

Unfortunately, under the current judicial system in mainland China, there is a lack of judicial protection for individuals facing illegal stalking, harassment, surveillance, and other stalking behaviors. Even celebrities may not be able to solve it for a long time when faced with stalking of illegitimate meals.[55] Many cases across China have shown that ordinary people who have been stalked may still be unable to solve the problem after they seek help from the judicial authorities. In the case of Wuhu, Anhui in March 2018, the entangled woman repeatedly rescued the police to no avail and was eventually killed.[56] In the homicide case in Laiyuan, Hebei in July of the same year, women and their families who had been stalked and harassed for a long time also helped the police repeatedly to no avail. It did not end until the opponent broke into the home with arms and was killed by victim’s parents.[57]

In the social culture of mainland China, the “stalker” type of courtship is highly respected, that is, as the saying goes, “good women (martyrs) are afraid of stalkers”.[58][59] Literary works also publicly promote such behaviors, and stalking between opposite sexes is thus beautified as courtship.[60] In real life, this type of behavior may even occur when the two parties do not know each other and the stalked person does not know in advance. Through online platforms and other social media, with the help of the convenience of online communication, individuals and institutions directly participate in, promote, and support various “courtship-style” tracing and stalking cases.[61]

France

Article 222–33–2 of the French Criminal Code (added in 2002) penalizes “Moral harassment,” which is: “Harassing another person by repeated conduct which is designed to or leads to a deterioration of his conditions of work liable to harm his rights and his dignity, to damage his physical or mental health or compromise his career prospects,” with a year’s imprisonment and a fine of EUR15,000.[62]

Germany

The German Criminal Code (§ 238 StGB) penalizes Nachstellung, defined as threatening or seeking proximity or remote contact with another person and thus heavily influencing their lives, with up to three years of imprisonment. The definition is not strict and allows “similar behaviour” to also be classified as stalking.

India

In 2013, Indian Parliament made amendments to the Indian Penal Code, introducing stalking as a criminal offence.[63] Stalking has been defined as a man following or contacting a woman, despite clear indication of disinterest by the woman, or monitoring her use of the Internet or electronic communication. A man committing the offence of stalking would be liable for imprisonment up to three years for the first offence, and shall also be liable to fine and for any subsequent conviction would be liable for imprisonment up to five years and with fine.

Italy

Following a series of high-profile incidents that came to public attention, a law was proposed in June 2008 which became effective in February 2009 (D.L. 23.02.2009 n. 11) making a criminal offence under the newly introduced art. 612 bis of the penal code, punishable with imprisonment ranging from six months up to five years, any “continuative harassing, threatening or persecuting behaviour which: (1) causes a state of anxiety and fear in the victim(s), or; (2) ingenerates within the victim(s) a motivated fear for his/her own safety or for the safety of relatives, kins [sic], or others tied to the victim him/herself by an affective relationship, or; (3), forces the victim(s) to change his/her living habits.” If the perpetrator of the offense is a subject tied to the victim by kinship or that is or has been in the past involved in a relationship with the victim (i.e., a current or former spouse or fiancé), or if the victim is a pregnant woman or a minor or a person with disabilities, the sanction can be elevated up to six years of incarceration.[64][65][66][67]

Japan

In 2000, Japan enacted a national law to combat this behaviour, after the murder of Shiori Ino.[68] Acts of stalking can be viewed as “interfering [with] the tranquility of others’ lives” and are prohibited under petty offence laws.

However, stalking cases are increasing rather than decreasing, with more than 20,000 people reporting cases to the police in 2013, and civil society organisations estimate that these are only the tip of the iceberg; Japan has seen the highest growth in stalking cases in the world in recent years, and stalking has continued to turn into homicide. Many victims say that reporting to the police is ineffective, that the police treat it as a minor domestic dispute, that the process of filing a court order for protection can take months, and that some people have to hire private bodyguards.[68][69]

Netherlands

In the Wetboek van Strafrecht, Article 285b[70] defines the crime of belaging (harassment), which is a term used for stalking.

Article 285b:1. One who unlawfully, systematically, and deliberately intrudes into someone’s personal environment with the intention to force the other to act in a way, or to prevent one to act in a certain way or to induce fear, will be prosecuted for harassment, for which the maximal punishment is three years and a fine of the fourth monetary category.2. The prosecution will only take place after a complaint of the person who is the victim of the crime.

Republic of Korea

Until 2021, simple stalking was treated as a kind of minor offence when it amounted to harassment, so stalkers were usually punished by a small fine or less than 30 days detention under the Minor Offences Act. In April 2021, the National Assembly passed an act intended to address widespread stalking crimes and protect victims, which came into force on October 21 the same year. The act includes a provision that mandates the victim must approve of punishment for the stalker. A subsequent bill proposes to remove this provision to address situations where the victim may fear retribution from the stalker.[71]

South Korea’s stalking laws were criticized for weaknesses and led to accusations the country does not treat violence against women seriously enough when a female subway worker in Seoul was stalked and stabbed to death in the subway restroom by her former colleague in September 2022. The stalker had been harassing the victim since 2019.[72]

In October 2022, the city of Seoul announced the opening of three shelters to house stalking victims and offer free counseling.[73]

Romania

Article 208 of the 2014 Criminal Code states:-

Article 208: Harassment

  1. The act of someone who repeatedly follows, without right or a legitimate interest, a person or his or her home, workplace or other place frequented, thus causing a state of fear.
  2. Making phone calls or communication by means of transmission, which by frequent or continuous use, causes fear to a person. This shall be punished with imprisonment from one to three months or a fine if the case is not a more serious offense.
  3. Criminal action is initiated by prior complaint of the victim.

Russia

In the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation, such an independent corpus delicti as stalking is absent. However, lawyers argue that the persecution of a person in Russia can also be seriously fined. The victim of stalking only needs to use the articles that are already in the code. So, if the persecutor uses threats, then should refer to Article 119 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation “Threats of murder or causing grievous bodily harm”. In this case, the offender is punished with compulsory labor for up to 480 hours or forced labor for up to 2 years. Also, the persecutor may face arrest for up to six months or imprisonment (restriction) of freedom for up to two years. “Violation of privacy” (Article 137 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation) can also be applied part of stalking. This crime manifests itself in the illegal collection of information about private life and its dissemination (including in public speeches and the media). For this, a criminal can receive a fine of up to 200 thousand rubles, go to compulsory work for up to 360 hours, and even be imprisoned for two years. In addition, persecutors often violate Article 138 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation Violation of the secrecy of correspondence, telephone conversations, postal, telegraph and other messages of citizens. The article provides for punishment ranging from a fine of 80 thousand rubles to correctional labor for up to one year.[74]

However, these are not all articles of the Criminal Code that can be applied to stalkers. As result, I.A. Yurchenko, author of Crimes Against Information Security, claims that victims of persecution, in the presence of appropriate circumstances, have the right to use Article 133 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation “Compulsion to Sexual Actions” (from a fine of 120 thousand rubles

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