Here’s another classic: 6 skinhead neonazis destroy degenerate foid wannabe in Spain.
>On October 6, 1991 , the transsexual woman Sonia Rescalvo Zafra was murdered by a brutal beating by a group of neo-Nazis in the Parque de la Ciudadela, in Barcelona. His murder acquired great relevance because it was "the first crime of a transsexual for the mere fact of being one of which information and perseverance is available in Spain".
>On the night of October 6, 1991, after a night of partying, six skinheads of extreme right-wing ideology sneaked into the Ciutadella Park in Barcelona through a hole in the fence, heading to the Musicians roundabout, a regular meeting place of homosexuals and transsexuals.
>There they proposed "to play the drum," a form in which they called kicking with their boots reinforced with iron points on the heads of their victims. Sonia and her co-worker Dori or Doris Romero slept that night in the open, in the park, and were identified by the group as "lumps" with " transvestite appearance". The beating that Sonia and Dori received was of such violence that one of the attackers broke a toenail, despite the fact that his boot was protected with a steel reinforcement. The first journalistic reports confused Sonia with a black person, as explained by the magistrate José Joaquín Pérez Beneyto, because "It was such a beating that they gave him all bruises". Dori managed to survive "by mere chance" according to the same sentence, but Sonia died "from a rain of kicks in the head and a stumble in the chest with a broomstick."
>After leaving both dying on the ground, they beat up a one-eyed homeless man, Miguel Pérez Barreiros, who was nearby. As a consequence, Miguel lost the only eye he saw, going blind.
>Subsequently the six aggressors went to the bar Vis a Vis. The next day they met with a friend, Óscar Lozano, to tell him the facts.
[…]
>The conversation allowed the arrest of seven young people between 16 and 17 years old: Pere Alsina Llinares, David Parladé Valdés, Héctor and Isaac López Frutos, Andrés Pascual Prieto, Oliver Sánchez Riera and Óscar Lozano. The records of their homes produced numerous neo-Nazi documents, knives, such as baseball bats and American fists , and Boixos Nois cards. Several people related to the investigation, among them the sub-inspector Miller, pointed out "the level of defiance, belligerence, arrogance and arrogance" shown by the detainees and their family environment.
>Three years later, the detainees were sentenced to 310 years in prison. Subsequently, the Supreme Court reduced the penalties by half. In 2011, with the exception of two of them, all were free.
es.m.wikipedia.org