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Police investigate convicted Holocaust revisionist Alison Chabloz over fresh blog posts

She received a two-year suspended sentence after being convicted of posting 'grossly offensive' songs

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A Holocaust revisionist who narrowly avoided jail after publishing “grossly offensive” songs mocking Jews is being investigated by police again after she called Shoah "a gargantuan accumulation of nonense".

Alison Chabloz, of Charlesworth, near Glossop, Derbyshire, was given a two-year suspended prison sentence on June 14, after being convicted of charges relating to three songs she posted to social media sites.

Chabloz, 54, performed her songs in YouTube videos, titled Nemo’s Antisemitic Universe, I Like It How It Is, performed at the right-wing London Forum in 2016, and a third, titled (((survivors))).

In the latter, Chabloz mocked Jewish figures, including Nobel Peace Prize winner Elie Wiesel, as well as Anne and Otto Frank, to the tune of Hava Nagila.

Derbyshire Constabulary confirmed on Monday it was investigating her again, having received a complaint on July 24 allegedly antisemitic online material.

On July 6, the day after the death of Shoah director Claude Lanzmann, Chabloz wrote on her website that the Holocaust is a “Gargantuan accumulation of nonsense, bound together by an endless string of gossip, relayed to us as gospel truth by our controlled media, our so-called democratic leaders and the brainwashed masses”.

In another post, dated July 29, Chabloz wrote: “My conviction, the first of its kind in the UK – one which the Crown Prosecution Service was initially reluctant to pursue, only changing tack after severe bouts of arm-twisting from my accusers (whose loyalty is to an illegitimate foreign state and not to Britain) – is merely another stepping stone along the way to breaking the myth of the six million.

“Even if I am eventually sent to prison, this will not change the fact of the matter that there simply is no evidence any such ‘genocide’ actually took place.”

A police spokesman said: “We are speaking with a number of involved agencies regarding potential crimes that may have been committed.

“Should an offence have been found to have taken place, then a criminal investigation will begin.”

Chabloz's two-year suspended prison sentence could be activated if she were convicted of another crime in that period.

As part of her sentence, Chabloz was also banned from posting anything onto social media for 12 months, and was ordered to complete 180 hours of unpaid work, as well as a 20-day rehabilitation programme.

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