In 2022, Trevor Kitchen gave two interviews to the UK column: one about the Swiss franc foreign exchange manipulation scandal that he was severely persecuted for reporting on, and another about how his persecution continues across borders.
As of 2023, Kitchen still lives in Portugal. Swiss bureaucrats' network Fraudulent whistleblowers: Kitchen genuinely believes that linguistic sleight of hand is a trick used by multilingual Swiss people to pervert the course of justice.
If the complainant is an insider Swiss banking systemA compliant lawyer will reassess his reporting. Fraud and corruption Treating the matter merely as a “misconduct concern” to ensure that the case falls into the realm of civil law rather than criminal law.
On the other hand, if the complainant is deemed an unwanted whistle-blower, the same complaint can be deliberately weaponized against him or her and turned into a criminal offence in Switzerland, namely for charges of “defamation” (a criminal offence in most continental European countries, even against public authorities rather than private individuals), “breach of confidentiality” or even “espionage” or “threat of bodily harm”.
Not only would the complainant be detained in Switzerland and persecuted internationally, but the criminalisation of the complaint would mean he would lose his pension. In the case of Rudolf Elmer (as mentioned by Trevor Kitchen in an interview for a previous UK column), the complainant could be put in solitary confinement for long periods and Swiss judges and prosecutors could instruct prison and police to deliberately search his body cavities using only their fingers. Swiss police brutality is sometimes Fataland is rarely reported.
Trevor Kitchen and Brian Gerrish discuss insightful opinion pieces The era of Swiss exceptionalism is overAnnounced in early 2023 The Daily TelegraphAmbrose Evans-Pritchard of is one of the few veteran British financial journalists who not only speaks French, German and Italian but also understands the worst of it. The Anglo-American Oligarchy's Conspiracy.
The interview goes beyond Swiss wrongdoing to examine how institutions like Credit Suisse have forced the entire Western world to follow their playbook, even in the world of journalism. Whistleblower Network News To Swiss bureaucrats in concert WNN publishes the article without author's name, In the archived version WNN originally commissioned Mark Worth to write this paper, but he has not published any papers in WNN since then.
Kitchen's conclusion is that Switzerland and other Western countries National Capture: The worst level of oligarchic corruption, where all public institutions follow the orders of a small group.