Axel Möller
Axel Möller (b. 9 April 1964 in Stralsund) is a German national activist. He is most known as an editor of Altermedia, the greatest German national web network. In 2011 the system made a trial against him and another editor, and he was condemned to 30 months prison for alleged "hate speech".
Life
Political development
Möller began his political development in 1992 in the German National Union (DVU), then changed to the Republikaner. Finally, Möller was member of the NPD Stralsund. He left the NPD in 2000 in a quarrel. He stayed active as a "free fascist".
Since the foundation of the Störtebeker.net (before the Stralsund.net) in 1997, he was one of the editors of it. This internet site later became part of altermedia. The system observed his activities since 2005 and noticed every connection from and to his computer, and this way they proved, he was one of the editors. That is the reason, why the EU demands compulsory data storage for months.
He was already punished for "people jape" 2000 and then 2002, the punishment was suspended, and lapsed 2004. In October 2011, the trial against him for being an editor of Altermedia began. The accusation presented 50 items, most of them reader opinions, that the prosecutor disliked. On 26 October 2011, Axel Möller was sentenced to two and a half years in prison by the Federal Republic of Germany justice system for his work as an editor of Altermedia.
New trial
In August 2012, the prosecutor delivered him a new bill of indictment. In the FRG it is obviously possible, to pick some comments from the internet to an article, accuse the author of the article and comdemn him to years of prison.Using this judiciary method, several thousand years of punishment are possible for each author on frequented web pages. On 27 March 2013, Axel Möller was sentenced to another year of prison.