Vatic Note: This speaks for itself. Its illuminating to say the least. Read it and see if you do not agree.
Glimpse into Illuminati Sex Practices
"The investigation into the prostitution ring in Lille ultimately swept up 10 suspects, including [former IMF Chief] Mr. Strauss-Kahn. They knew each other largely through their membership as French Freemasons."
By DOREEN CARVAJAL and MAÏA de la BAUME
(New York Times, abridged by henrymakow.com)
PARIS
-- More than a year after resigning in disgrace as the managing
director of the Internatitsonal Monetary Fund, Dominique Strauss-Kahn is
pursuing a uniquely French legal defense to settle a criminal inquiry
that exposed his hidden life as a libertine.
Mr.
Strauss-Kahn, 63, a silver-haired economist, is seeking to throw out
criminal charges in an inquiry into ties to a prostitution ring in
northern France with the legal argument that the authorities are
unfairly trying to "criminalize lust."
That
defense and the investigation, which is facing a critical judicial
hearing in late November, have offered a keyhole view into a clandestine
practice in certain powerful circles of French society: secret soirees
with lawyers, judges, police officials, journalists and musicians that
start with a fine meal and end with naked guests and public sex with
multiple partners.
In
France, "Libertinage" has a long history in the culture, dating from a
16th-century religious sect of libertines. But the most perplexing
question in the Strauss-Kahn affair is how a career politician with
ambition to lead one of Europe's most powerful nations was blinded to
the possibility that his zest for sex parties could present a liability,
or risk blackmail.
The
exclusive orgies called "parties fies" -- lavish Champagne affairs
costing around $13,000 each -- were organized as a roving international
circuit from Paris to Washington by businessmen seeking to ingratiate
themselves with Mr. Strauss-Kahn. Some of that money, according to a
lawyer for the main host, ultimately paid for prostitutes because of a
shortage of women at the mixed soirees orchestrated largely for the
benefit of Mr. Strauss-Kahn, who sometimes sought sex with three or four
women.
On Thursday, Mr. Strauss-Kahn broke a long silence to acknowledge that perhaps his double life as an unrestrained libertine was a little outré.
"I
long thought that I could lead my life as I wanted," he said in an
interview with the French magazine Le Point. "And that includes free
behavior between consenting adults. There are numerous parties that
exist like this in Paris, and you would be surprised to encounter
certain people. I was naïve."
"I was too out of step with French society," he added. "I was wrong."
ORGIES
Mr.
Strauss-Kahn's name first surfaced in the French inquiry by chance, in
May 2011. French investigators were tapping the telephones of Dominique
Alderweireld, an owner of Belgian sex clubs who is also a suspect in the
prostitution ring.
In
one conversation between Mr. Alderweireld and a longtime childhood
friend, René Kojfer, who worked at the Carlton Hotel in Lille, the men
were gossiping about Mr. Strauss-Kahn's recent New York arrest,
according to lawyers involved in the case.
They
then recalled a freewheeling luncheon in 2009 at a Paris restaurant
called L'Aventure, and Mr. Kojfer discussed whether they could make
money by offering information about that day to Ms. Diallo's lawyer, Mr.
Thompson, who was never called, the lawyers said.
At
L'Aventure, Mr. Strauss-Kahn and a few friends gathered in a private
basement club, carpeted in purple and black tiger stripes, with a female
Belgian escort and Mr. Alderweireld's companion, Béatrice Legrain, who
recalled that lunch in an interview.
She
said that Mr. Strauss-Kahn, energized by Viagra, had sex with the
escort and then followed Ms. Legrain to the bathroom, grabbing her and
demanding sex. But she said she rebuffed him and it "wasn't a big deal."
Mr. Strauss-Kahn's lawyer declined to comment.
In
his own interview, Mr. Alderweireld made light of the "petit" episode
at L'Aventure. His lawyer, Sorin Margulis, took a more scornful view:
"It's more an act of Louis XIV."
FREEMASONRY
The
investigation into the prostitution ring in Lille ultimately swept up
10 suspects, including Mr. Strauss-Kahn. They knew each other largely
through their membership as French Freemasons, according to Karl
Vandamme, a defense lawyer who represents Fabrice Paszkowski, the owner
of a medical supply company who played a crucial role in organizing the
sex parties.
"Libertines
are people like you and me: people who have a normal life," said Mr.
Vandamme, who said his client invested around $65,000 in party expenses,
betting on the political rise of Mr. Strauss-Kahn.
The
banker, he said, would typically arrive late for the more than a dozen
parties, held over a period of about five years. There was a rhythm to
the gatherings, with everyone dressed for a sit-down dinner, he said.
Then over time, couples separated, "kisses were exchanged between one
woman and another and between a husband and the wife of a friend" until
the guests "all ended up nude."
Mr. Strauss-Kahn's double life is not surprising to some Parisians.
"He's
not the only libertine man in the political world," said Olivia Cattan,
who leads an anti-sexism association called Words of Women and believes
the case reflects a code of silence. "It is linked to power, and women
are often complicit when it can guarantee them a job."
--
Thanks to Mike for this.
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