Difference between revisions of "Geijer Affair"

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|participants=Lennart Geijer, Thorbjörn Fälldin, Cecilia Nettelbrandt, Krister Wickman, Ragnar Lassinant,Hjalmar Mehr, Olof Johansson,Gunnar Sträng,Olof Palme,Erling Persson,Torsten Eriksson,Björn Tarras-Wahlberg, Bonnier family  
 
|participants=Lennart Geijer, Thorbjörn Fälldin, Cecilia Nettelbrandt, Krister Wickman, Ragnar Lassinant,Hjalmar Mehr, Olof Johansson,Gunnar Sträng,Olof Palme,Erling Persson,Torsten Eriksson,Björn Tarras-Wahlberg, Bonnier family  
 
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In 1977 the '''Geijer Affair''' was exposed by journalist [[Peter Bratt]] in ''[[Dagens Nyheter]]'' (DN). The year before, National Police Chief [[Carl Persson]] gave a classified memo to then prime minister [[Olof Palme]] containing a list of names of people in the upper echelons of society, business leaders and high-ranking politicians, who had bought sex from prostitutes. Several of the prostitutes were underage, girls in the age of 13-14 from a children's home. The former Minister of Justice [[Lennart Geijer]] was one of the accused . He could thus be seen as a security risk, as some of the [[prostitutes]] also had [[KGB]] agents from their native [[Poland]] as clients.<ref>https://www.varldenidag.se/nyheter/bordellharvan-tillbaka-pa-regeringens-bord/161921</ref>  
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The '''Geijer Affair''' was a Swedish incidence of the [[VIPaedophile]] phenomenon brought to light in 1977 by journalist [[Peter Bratt]] in ''[[Dagens Nyheter]]'' (DN). The year before, National Police Chief [[Carl Persson]] had given a classified memo to then prime minister [[Olof Palme]] containing a list of names of people in the upper echelons of society, business leaders and high-ranking politicians, who had bought sex from prostitutes. Several of the prostitutes were girls aged 13-14 from a children's home. The former [[Sweden/Minister of Justice|Minister of Justice]] [[Lennart Geijer]] was one of the accused. He could thus be seen as a security risk, as some of the [[prostitutes]]' clients included [[KGB]] agents from their native [[Poland]].<ref>https://www.varldenidag.se/nyheter/bordellharvan-tillbaka-pa-regeringens-bord/161921</ref>  
  
However, Peter Bratt could not show anything concrete and DN was soon forced to go out and apologize to Geijer.<ref>https://sverigesradio.se/artikel/5337923</ref> But the truth about the "Geijer affair" is that Bratt was correct.<ref>https://www.jure.se/ns/default.asp?url=visatitel.asp?tuid=6663</ref> [[Ebbe Carlsson]] and [[Hans Holmér]] were involved in the cover-up media campaign against Bratt.
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== Participants ==
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In the National Police Chief memo, six people with important positions in society are mentioned: Lennart Geijer, Minister of Justice until autumn 1976; [[Thorbjörn Fälldin]], leader of the Centre Party, then prime minister; Deputy Speaker [[Cecilia Nettelbrandt]] (Liberals), Central Bank Governor [[Krister Wickman]]; County Governor [[Ragnar Lassinanti]]; and Stockholm Municipal commissioner [[Hjalmar Mehr]]. Politicians mentioned by several prostitutes, but not in the memo are [[Olof Johansson]], then Deputy Chairman of the Centre party; [[Gunnar Sträng]], Minister of Finance until autumn 1976, [[Olof Palme]], prime minister until 1976; [[Erling Persson]], principal owner of [[H & M]], today one of Sweden's largest companies,  Director General [[Torsten Eriksson]], and [[Björn Tarras-Wahlberg]], then business lobbyist in the Riksdag. Other unnamed persons are "two High Court lawyers', "an elderly gentleman who belonged to the absolute power elite”", "one of the royal family's foremost members" (not the king himself, however), "half the members of [[Bonnier|a famous book publisher family]]", , a [[Wallenberg]]".<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20060215133950/https://www.socialisten.nu/div/De_utpekade_mannen_74_051002.shtml</ref><ref>https://www.flashback.org/t314588p3</ref>
  
In the National Police Chief memo, six people with important positions in society are mentioned: Lennart Geijer, Minister of Justice until autumn 1976; [[Thorbjörn Fälldin]], leader of the Centre Party, then prime minister; Deputy Speaker [[Cecilia Nettelbrandt]] (Liberals), Central Bank Governor [[Krister Wickman]]; County Governor [[Ragnar Lassinanti]]; and Stockholm Municipal commissioner [[Hjalmar Mehr]]. Politicians mentioned by several prostitutes, but not in the memo are [[Olof Johansson]], then Deputy Chairman of the Centre party; [[Gunnar Sträng]], Minister of Finance until autumn 1976, [[Olof Palme]], prime minister until 1976; [[Erling Persson]], principal owner of [[H & M]], today one of Sweden's largest companies,  Director General [[Torsten Eriksson]], and [[Björn Tarras-Wahlberg]], then business lobbyist in the Riksdag. Other unnamed persons are "two High Court lawyers', "an elderly gentleman who belonged to the absolute power elite”", "one of the royal family's foremost members" (not the king himself, however), "half the members of [[Bonnier|a famous book publisher family]]", , a [[Wallenberg]]".<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20060215133950/https://www.socialisten.nu/div/De_utpekade_mannen_74_051002.shtml</ref><ref>https://www.flashback.org/t314588p3</ref>
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== Cover up ==
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[[Ebbe Carlsson]] and [[Hans Holmér]] were involved in the cover-up media campaign against Bratt. Peter Bratt's evidence did not lead to legal charges. DN soon apologized to Geijer after legal threats.<ref>https://sverigesradio.se/artikel/5337923</ref> But the truth about the "Geijer affair" is that Bratt was correct.<ref>https://www.jure.se/ns/default.asp?url=visatitel.asp?tuid=6663</ref>
 
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Latest revision as of 09:13, 29 November 2024

Event.png Geijer Affair (VIPaedophile) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
LocationSweden
ParticipantsLennart Geijer, Thorbjörn Fälldin, Cecilia Nettelbrandt, Krister Wickman, Ragnar Lassinant, Hjalmar Mehr, Olof Johansson, Gunnar Sträng, Olof Palme, Erling Persson, Torsten Eriksson, Björn Tarras-Wahlberg, Bonnier family
DescriptionSwedish 1970s prostitution/VIPaedophile exposure with possible intelligence blackmail ties.

The Geijer Affair was a Swedish incidence of the VIPaedophile phenomenon brought to light in 1977 by journalist Peter Bratt in Dagens Nyheter (DN). The year before, National Police Chief Carl Persson had given a classified memo to then prime minister Olof Palme containing a list of names of people in the upper echelons of society, business leaders and high-ranking politicians, who had bought sex from prostitutes. Several of the prostitutes were girls aged 13-14 from a children's home. The former Minister of Justice Lennart Geijer was one of the accused. He could thus be seen as a security risk, as some of the prostitutes' clients included KGB agents from their native Poland.[1]

Participants

In the National Police Chief memo, six people with important positions in society are mentioned: Lennart Geijer, Minister of Justice until autumn 1976; Thorbjörn Fälldin, leader of the Centre Party, then prime minister; Deputy Speaker Cecilia Nettelbrandt (Liberals), Central Bank Governor Krister Wickman; County Governor Ragnar Lassinanti; and Stockholm Municipal commissioner Hjalmar Mehr. Politicians mentioned by several prostitutes, but not in the memo are Olof Johansson, then Deputy Chairman of the Centre party; Gunnar Sträng, Minister of Finance until autumn 1976, Olof Palme, prime minister until 1976; Erling Persson, principal owner of H & M, today one of Sweden's largest companies, Director General Torsten Eriksson, and Björn Tarras-Wahlberg, then business lobbyist in the Riksdag. Other unnamed persons are "two High Court lawyers', "an elderly gentleman who belonged to the absolute power elite”", "one of the royal family's foremost members" (not the king himself, however), "half the members of a famous book publisher family", , a Wallenberg".[2][3]

Cover up

Ebbe Carlsson and Hans Holmér were involved in the cover-up media campaign against Bratt. Peter Bratt's evidence did not lead to legal charges. DN soon apologized to Geijer after legal threats.[4] But the truth about the "Geijer affair" is that Bratt was correct.[5]

 

Known Participants

3 of the 13 of the participants already have pages here:

ParticipantDescription
Thorbjörn FälldinSingle Bilderberger Prime Minister of Sweden
Gunnar SträngSwedish Finance Minister. Attended the 1973 Bilderberg
Krister WickmanSwedish central banker and deep state functionary
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References