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noname223

Archangel
Aug 18, 2020
6,996
I had to think about the following video. A war criminal drinks I think cyianide after hearing the guilty sentence.



Then I stumbled on the following suicide court room



There are theories in the comment that the lawyers helped with the suicide.

These people look pretty determined. Okay the one is in fact a war criminal and has a lot of blood on his hand. I wonder about the psychology about that. I imagine it similar to all the nazis who commited suicide at the end of the war. They hope for the best but prepare for the worst. And then finally when they hear the verdict it drives them over the edge. But I also ask myself whether it should be seen as a message to the world. Like go fuck yourself and this verdict. The war criminal claimed he was innocent and wanted to become a martyr. I wonder why the postponed it to the last second. I could imagine it is quite hard to pull that off in court. A lot could go wrong. I think the poison is probably not that peaceful. They must know their cards are pretty bad. But the hope finally dies in the moment they hear the verdict. Hearing that might could drive people over the edge and overcome the survival instinct. I am not sure whether they want that other people feel guilty to put them with the back against the wall.

It also reminds me of the suicide of Budd Dwyer. There are a lot of speculation around his suicide in front of live cameras. Maybe he wanted that the world digs deeper into his case to prove he was innocent. But it remains unclear.
 
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Maki9

Maki9

Member
May 8, 2026
16
My uncle was part of the HVO and knew Praljak personally. i heard many stories from my mother, his sister.

He claimed it was normal for him and former Croatian soldiers to keep a small bottle of cyanide (or similar poisons) with them, in case they are interrogated (torture commonly involved) or they're (as in this case) convicted as war criminals
 
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