Prince Charles, Prince William’s Killer Found GUILTY! ‘Ginger Extremist’ Mark Colborne Willing To Sacrifice Life For Prince Harry
By KJ Mariño | Sep 23, 2015 11:45 AM EDT
A "ginger extremist" is reportedly willing to kill Prince Charles and Prince William in favor of Prince Harry to become the next heir to the throne. Based on the reports, 37-year-old Mark Colborne, who was arrested on June 3, 2014 for the alleged assassination plots to the British royals, admitted that he would sacrifice his life so Prince Harry would become king.
Unfortunately, Prince Charles and Prince William's alleged killer has been convicted after the court found him guilty for plotting a terrorist attack. According ABC News Australia, Colborne even compared himself to Norwegian extremist Ander Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in a killing rampage aimed at alleged multiculturalism advocates in 2011.
"I would sacrifice my life for that one shot. Kill Charles and William and Harry become king. Kill the tyrants," his plans to kill Prince Charles read, as written on his notebook. "I want them to see my transition from poor red-haired victimized minority that is constantly walked over to a fully transformed military terrorist."
Last year, Colborne was arrested after his half-brother found chemicals and papers detailing his racial hatred at their family home in the southern English coast of Southampton. The jurors were told he bought the ingredients for deadly poison cyanide online and stockpiled dust masks, metal filter funnels, plastic syringes and latex gloves.
Following the Old Bailey retrial, Prince Charles and Prince William's assassinator, Mark Colborne, was found guilty by a majority of preparing terrorist attacks. Daily Mail reported the jury convicted him on the basis that he possessed handwritten notes copied from Internet sources including "The Terrorist Handbook," "The Complete Improvised Kitchen" and "The Jolly Roger Cookbook," which is about the production of viable explosives.
Also in Colborne's possession were books with titles, "Assorted Nasties," "Silent Death" and "The Poor Man's James Bond," which contained recipes for the production and delivery systems of lethal poisons such as cyanide.
Prince Charles' alleged killer Mark Colborne, however, denied the terrorism charges, claiming the diary notes about his plans were just "angry rants" made when he was off medication for depression, The Sydney Morning Herald noted.
Meanwhile, Judge John Bevan, who adjourned the sentencing to Tuesday, Nov. 3, said that the case was "very strange" and that it also involved a "very strange person."
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