On the fourth day of a trial at Birmingham Crown Court, "Nazi Princess" Alice Cutter, has been charged with being a member of National Action after it was banned in December 2016.
She allegedly took part in a "Miss Hitler" beauty contest in 2016, under the name "Buchenwald Princess."
A badge for the Nazi association for women, Deutsches Frauenwerk, was found at her home a court has heard.
The Huffington Post reports:
Alice Cutter maintains she has never been a member of National Action, either before or after the ban.
She allegedly took part in a "Miss Hitler" beauty contest in 2016, under the name "Buchenwald Princess."
A badge for the Nazi association for women, Deutsches Frauenwerk, was found at her home a court has heard.
The Huffington Post reports:
Jurors trying Alice Cutter were shown a picture of the Deutsches Frauenwerk badge after her barrister referred to a “misogynistic” National Action propaganda image showing a woman being attacked.Read more: Huffington Post
Cutter, 22, and her 24-year-old partner Mark Jones, both of Mulhalls Mill, Sowerby Bridge, near Halifax, West Yorkshire, deny being members of National Action after it was banned by the government in December 2016.
The court has heard Cutter entered a National Action beauty pageant in June 2016 – allegedly in an effort to attract new members to the group.
In an interview accompanying a web page giving details of the contest, Cutter wrote: “It is important to me that there’s a balance of feminine to masculine in the movement – without feminine involvement, what would a movement be?
“Women are the most important figures when it comes to teaching and raising the next generation to be strong and proud. “We need to step up, be the lionesses we ought to be and rip apart the hyenas laughing at us as we get raped, beaten, brainwashed and de-feminised en masse.”
Alice Cutter maintains she has never been a member of National Action, either before or after the ban.