The Brutal Execution of Ustaše Nazi Sexual Deviants Method *Warning REAL FOOTAGE

Picture this.

It’s a Tuesday night in August 1941.

A 5-year-old girl named Milica is asleep on a straw mattress in southern Yugoslavia.

Her mother is in the next room quietly humming.

Her grandmother is sitting by a window watching the road.

There is nothing unusual.

There never is.

Until there is.

Then just after midnight, dogs start barking all at once across the entire village.

By sunrise, Milica, her mother, and her grandmother will be dead.

Thrown alive into a hole in the earth, so deep that their screams couldn’t be heard from the surface.

And the men who threw them in, they sat at the edge of that pit, drinking wine and laughing while the bodies were still falling.

This is not a rumor.

This is not speculation.

This is documented testimony.

This is verified history.

This is what happened to the village of Prebilofi, and the world has almost completely forgotten it.

Before we go any further, if you believe that silence is complicity, that forgotten victims deserve more than footnotes, subscribe to WW2 Timetales right now.

Hit the bell, turn on every notification, every video we publish as a case file.

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You’re making sure it doesn’t disappear.

Now, let’s go back to where this story actually begins.

Because to understand Pbalofshi, you first have to understand how an entire country was swallowed whole.

Here is something most history classes skip entirely.

Before World War II, Yugoslavia was not a weak country.

It had fought in World War I on the Allied side and paid an enormous price.

It lost over 1 million people, nearly 17% of its population.

The village of Prebelofi alone had sent 20 volunteers to fight in the Serbian army during that war.

These people had history.

They had roots going back to an 1875 uprising against Ottoman rule.

They had already survived one catastrophic war and rebuilt.

Then 1939 arrived.

On September 1st, Nazi Germany invaded Poland and the dominoes began to fall.

By late 1940, something unexpected happened in the southeast.

Italy, Adolf Hitler’s partner, tried to invade Greece and got humiliated.

Greek forces pushed the Italians back hard and Britain seized the moment, landing troops on the European continent through Greece.

For Hitler, this was a strategic nightmare.

He was planning Operation Barbar Roa, his massive invasion of the Soviet Union, and he could not have British forces threatening his southern flank.

The Balkans had to be locked down fast.

His plan, pull Yugoslavia into the Axis Alliance and use its territory as a highway into Greece.

On March 25th, 1941, the Yuboslav government signed the tripartite pact, officially joining the Axis.

The reaction was immediate and volcanic.

In Belgrade, thousands of Serbs poured into the streets.

Their message was unambiguous.

Better war than the pact.

Better death than slavery.

The government, sensing the collapse of its own legitimacy, almost immediately announced it would not honor the agreement.

Hitler received the news on the morning of March 27th.

His response was swift and cold.

He ordered the total destruction of Yugoslavia.

On April 6th, 1941, under the code name Operation Retribution, German bombers reduced the center of Belgrade to rubble in a single day.

17,000 civilians died in the capital alone.

In those first hours, Yugoslavia surrendered in 11 days.

From its ruins, a puppet state was carved out, the independent state of Croatia, and handed to a movement called the USke.

What came next was not a military occupation.

It was a killing program.

Here is where the journalism gets uncomfortable and necessary.

The Ushach were not simply soldiers who committed excesses.

They were ideological exterminators.

Their stated goal was the elimination of Serbs, Jews, and Roma people from Croatian territory by any means necessary.

Their leader was Ante Pavellic.

His chief executioner of the camp system was Veicosa Verurick, who personally oversaw a network of concentration camps and genocide operations across the independent state of Croatia.

The US adopted a formula reportedly circulating among their commanders, one-third of Serbs to be killed, one-third to be expelled, one-third to be forcibly converted to Catholicism.

What made the UESH uniquely horrifying, even compared to other Axis forces, was the personal nature of the violence.

These were often local men killing their neighbors.

People who had grown up in the same towns, attended the same markets, known the same families for generations.

In rural Herzugggoina, US mesh units moved village by village through the summer of 1941, and in early August, they arrived at Prebel.

Before the war, Prebel had exactly 1,000 inhabitants.

The men of the village had heard what was happening in surrounding areas.

Accounts traveled fast, whispered across fields, passed between refugees, stumbling through the hills.

The adult men made a desperate calculation.

If they disappeared into the mountains, the hastha would have no reason to harm women and children.

They were catastrophically wrong.

On the night of August 4th, 1941, an estimated 3,000 uses maybe, many of them from the surrounding Croat villages surrounded Pbolshi from every direction.

Huh.

They moved house by house in the dark.

Women were woken by rifle butts on their doors.

Elderly men were dragged from their beds.

Children were pulled from their mothers.

Livestock was stolen.

Food stores were looted.

Every home was systematically stripped.

Then the villagers were herded to the center of the settlement and forced into the village primary school.

What followed inside those walls is among the most documented and most disturbing testimonies of sexual violence in World War II European history.

Survivor Mara Belalute, the only woman to survive the school atrocities, later gave formal testimony to Yugoslav war crimes investigators in 1946.

Her account was precise, methodical, devastating.

She described a 22-year-old man named Moxim Belalute who was ordered at gunpoint to assault his own cousin.

He refused.

He was tortured for his refusal with a brutality that investigators struggled to put into formal language.

She described anesh member named Nicola Moran who raped a local teacher named Stana Arnout then forced her own students children to participate in her assault over the course of a week under direct threat of execution.

When the teacher’s mind finally broke under the trauma, she was killed.

Her body was buried in the schoolyard.

Pi approximately 50 infants were taken from their mother’s arms, swung by their legs, and their heads smashed against the school wall in front of their mothers.

This violence was not the breakdown of discipline.

Two Roman Catholic priests, Father Alia Tomas and Father Marco Hoffco, were present and participated in the crimes.

On August 6th, 1941, the operation moved to its final stage.

Ivan Jovanovic, nicknamed Blackie, commanded 150 bay fighters.

That morning, they were reinforced by another 400 men from the nearby town of of IPena, 550 armed men, hundreds of captive civilians.

The prisoners were loaded into six cattle rail cars, told they were being transported to Bgrade.

The train stopped at a small station called Supermani on the west bank of the Naredva River.

From there, the captives were marched into the hills.

Their destination was the Galabinka Pit, a natural carsted cave formation in the limestone landscape of Herzuggoina.

Families were brought to the edge in groups and pushed in.

The initial vertical drop was 27 m.

Below that, a steep slope descended another 100 m into total darkness.

Small children were thrown into the air before being cast into the void.

One woman went into labor as she fell.

Her newborn died with her beneath the weight of the bodies that followed.

An entire clan of 78 people, three generations of one family, died together in the crush at the bottom of that single pit.

When the last prisoner had been thrown in, the sat near the edge.

They poured wine.

They toasted.

They laughed.

300 children died that day alone.

Of the more than 820 victims from Pribalosshi, only 170 survived the entire massacre.

45 of those had fallen into the pits and somehow survived the fall, crawling out later through side passages to tell the world what had happened.

What is extraordinary and what distinguishes this massacre from dozens of others lost to silence is the paper trail.

Catholic bishop Elajimisha Mik of Mushtar wrote a formal letter on November 7th 1941 addressed to Archbishop Elajibanak.

In it he documented the massacres sweeping Herzgoina.

His words were not abstract.

He wrote of towns by name.

He wrote of six full railway wagons of women, mothers and girls younger than 10 transported to six Mura Mi taken into the hills and thrown from cliffs while still alive.

He documented that 700 Orthodox Christians were thrown into a single pit in the town of Leben.

He documented 3,700 killed in the parish of Klepsi.

And then Italian General Aleandro Wuzano compiled his own report for Bonito Mussolini, including descriptions of mass murder, systematic sexual violence, and the participation of Catholic clergy in the killings.

Even Italy’s fascist leadership was disturbed.

The crimes were known.

They were documented in real time by high-ranking officials and the killing continued anyway.

After the massacre, Stasha authorities attempted to erase the crime scene by erasing the victim.

Between 60 and 70 Croatian families were resettled into the emptied homes of Pbolofchi within a month of the killings.

The village was officially renamed Novo, New Village.

The old name was to be forgotten.

The old people were to be forgotten with it.

When Italian forces later occupied Herzgoina, the usest settlers fled.

The renamed village sat empty.

A ghost town built on mass graves.

After the war, the Galabinka pit was sealed with concrete in 1961, locked shut over the remains of the dead.

It would not be opened for 29 more years.

In 1990, Serbian Orthodox patriarch Pavle led priests down into the pit for the first memorial service ever held over the remains.

Investigators recovered the remains of approximately 1,550 individuals from that single pit.

In 1991, on the 50th anniversary of the massacre, the remains of nearly 4,000 victims recovered from the Galabinka pit and 15 surrounding pits were carried to the crypt of the newly built church of the synaxis of Serbian saints and martyrs of Prebelshi and laid to rest with dignity.

One year later in June 1992, Croatian military units burned Prebelshi again.

They demolished the church.

They destroyed the crypt.

The dead were desecrated a second time.

Of the 550 known participants in the Prebelofchi massacre, only 14 were ever brought to trial.

One of the judges presiding over the trials was himself, a former bay with personal connections to the crime.

Six were sentenced to death.

The rest received prison sentences, the majority around 3 years for participation in the murder of hundreds of civilians.

Ivan Joanovvic Blackie, who commanded the operation at the Galabinka Pit, managed to blend into Tito’s partisans at the war’s end, hiding in plain sight for over a decade near the city of Sabatica.

He was arrested in 1956 and executed in 1958.

Bes Labour, the architect of the camp system and the man most responsible for the genocide across the independent state of Croatia, fled to Spain.

He lived there freely for over two decades.

In April 1969, he was killed in his own home by an assassin reportedly sent by Yugoslav intelligence.

Across Yugoslavia, an estimated one 2 million people died during World War II.

More than 581,000 of them were civilians, not soldiers, not combatants.

People who simply lived in the wrong place under the wrong regime.

Here is what makes Prebelofchi different from other stories we’ve covered on this channel.

This massacre was not discovered after the fact.

It was reported in real time by a Catholic bishop, by an Italian general, documented in letters sent directly to the highest levels of Axis leadership.

The information existed, the knowledge was there, and the world moved on anyway.

That is the most disturbing detail in this entire story.

Not the violence itself, as monstrous as it was, but the silence that followed.

The concrete poured over the pit.

The village renamed, the church destroyed twice.

History doesn’t just get forgotten.

Sometimes it gets buried deliberately.

That is exactly why channels like this one exist.

If this story stayed with you, good.

It should subscribe to WW2 Timetales and be part of the community that refuses to let these stories disappear.

Hit the like button, drop the word Prebalofchi in the comments so we know you watch to the end and stood as a witness today.

Share this video.

Not for us.

For the A20 people from that village who never got to tell their own story.

We’ll see you in the next episode.

This is WW2 Timetales and we don’t let history stay buried.

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Security Throws Elderly Black Man Off Plane — One Call Later, $4 Billion Vanishes –

You don’t belong up here, old man.

Collect your things and move.

Those were the last words Diane Hartwell ever spoke as a Valor Airways employee.

She didn’t know that yet.

She was too busy feeling powerful to notice she was standing at the edge of a cliff.

An 82year-old man had boarded flight 311 from JFK to London Gatwick that Tuesday morning with a valid first class ticket, a confirmed seat reservation, and a bad hip that needed left side leg room.

He was quiet.

He was unhurried.

He wore a brown corduroy jacket with worn elbows and carried a canvas satchel that looked like it had survived several decades of honest use.

He didn’t look like a threat.

He didn’t look like a billionaire.

He didn’t look like the man who held the financial future of an entire airline in the inside pocket of that corduroy jacket.

And that was exactly why Diane Hartwell decided he didn’t belong.

Security officers grabbed him by the arms.

They marched him down the aisle past every watching passenger.

They pushed him through the terminal door.

He stumbled, his satchel fell, his paper scattered across the carpet of JFK Terminal 5 like confetti at the worst kind of party.

He dusted off his jacket.

He sat down in a plastic chair.

He unwrapped the sandwich he had packed from home and then he made one phone call.

That call lasted 4 minutes and 11 seconds.

Within 18 minutes of hanging up, Valor Airways had lost $4 billion in credit and its stock was in freefall.

Within 6 hours, the plane that had just thrown him out was impounded on a remote tarmac at Heathrow Airport, surrounded by police vehicles.

Within 24 hours, the CEO was escorted from his own office.

The lead flight attendant had been handed her own name tag in a sealed envelope with a single line written across it in red marker.

And the influencer who had laughed and filmed the whole thing was sitting on his suitcase in the London rain calling his mother.

That call cost $4 billion and every cent of it was worth it.

This is the story of the most expensive lesson in the history of American aviation.

And it began with one woman who thought she knew exactly who she was looking at.

Valor Airways Flight 311 departed JFK on a Tuesday morning that felt ordinary in every possible way.

The weather was clear.

A high pressure system had parked itself over the northeast, scrubbing the sky to a clean, unremarkable blue.

The kind of morning that asks nothing of you.

The kind of morning you don’t remember.

The cabin was full.

The crew was prepared.

The gate agent had processed 247 boarding passes without incident.

The coffee in the galley was hot.

Everything was exactly as it should have been.

Nothing about that morning suggested that by the time Flight 311’s wheels touched down at Heathrow, the airline that operated it would be bankrupt.

That its stock would have lost 61% of its value in a single trading session.

That its CEO would be packing a cardboard box in a Dallas office building while security contractors waited at his door.

That fuel suppliers in London would be refusing to pump a single gallon on credit because the credit no longer existed to pump against.

Nothing about that morning suggested any of it, except for one thing.

On the floor of Terminal 5, after the plane pulled back from the gate after the door sealed and the engines began their patient conversation with the runway, there sat a man in a brown corduroy jacket.

His canvas satchel was on the seat beside him.

His reading glasses, held together on the left arm with a rubber band, were pushed up on his forehead.

He was eating a turkey sandwich he had made at home that morning, wrapped in wax paper the way his mother had taught him 70 years ago.

He was not crying.

He was not shouting.

He was not calling a lawyer or flagging down a police officer or making a scene of any kind.

He was thinking.

He was calculating.

And the thing about Augustus Bowmont, the thing that Diane Hartwell could not have known because she had not bothered to look, was that when Augustus Bowmont sat quietly and calculated entire industries felt the result.

He didn’t look like danger.

He
had never needed to.

The number is $4 billion.

Not as an abstraction, not as a figure on a spreadsheet.

Think about what $4 billion looks like when it leaves a company in 18 minutes.

It looks like a stock ticker bleeding red faster than any algorithm can process.

It looks like a CFO in Dallas screaming into a phone that has already been disconnected.

It looks like fuel suppliers in three countries simultaneously deciding that a handshake agreement is not worth the paper it was never written on.

It looks like 140 aircraft sitting at gates across 12 cities going nowhere because the company that put them there can no longer afford to move them.

That is what $4 billion leaving a company looks like.

And the man who initiated all of it was sitting in a plastic chair in Terminal 5, finishing his sandwich, waiting for his 215 British Airways connection.

His name was Augustus Bowmont, and most people had never heard of him.

That was exactly how he preferred it.

Before we get into this, where are you watching from right now? Drop your city in the comments below.

I want to know.

I read every single one.

And listen, if you have ever walked into a room and felt someone decide before you opened your mouth, before you said a single word that you did not belong there, this story was made for you.

Hit that subscribe button.

Give this video a like.

It helps more people find stories like this one, and stories like this one deserve to be found.

Now, let’s talk about Augustus Bowmont.

Because to understand what he did on that Tuesday morning, you first have to understand who he actually was.

And who he was will surprise you.

Continue reading….
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