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Friday, November 1, 2013

The Asda Nazi: Shameless tattooed father sparks fury after parading down aisles in SS uniform and pushing baby in trolley

 

  • Polish-born shopper who lost family members in the Nazi gas chambers said she wanted to make sure the man was evicted
  • Paul Dutton identified himself as a Nazi sympathiser on Twitter
  • Angry customers prompted manager to ask the grandfather to leave
  • Horrified shopper said Halloween is NO excuse for offensive outfit
By Lizzie Parry
A Nazi fanatic was evicted from an Asda store after parading through the aisles wearing the uniform of the most brutal of Adolf Hitler's men, the SS - responsible for the genocide of millions of Jews.
The man, who appeared to be pushing a baby in a trolley at the Cambridge branch, was confronted by angry customers, riled by his offensive get up.
Dressed in the distinctive black uniform of Hitler's bodyguards, with a red armband emblazoned with a swastika, Paul Dutton, 48, from Cambridge, took to Twitter to identify himself as the Nazi sympathizer.
Shoppers were horrified when they spotted a man dressed as Hitler doing his shop in the Beehive branch of Asda in Cambridge
Nazi fanatic Paul Dutton claimed on Twitter it was he who was thrown out of an Asda store in Cambridge after horrified shoppers took offence at his Nazi-SS uniform
A man, dressed as a Nazi, was asked to leave an Asda store in Cambridge
A man, dressed as a Nazi, was asked to leave an Asda store in Cambridge
Outraged customers complained prompting the manager of the Cambridge branch of Asda to ask the Nazi sympathiser, pictured above entering the store yesterday, to leave

Claiming responsibility for the stunt, Mr Dutton, under the name Operation Fail Safe, wrote on the social network: 'I wear a black SS armband in Asda twice a week for past three years.
'I've shopped in Asda since the place was opened twice a week, this is how Asda repay me for my loyalty.'
He said he had wanted to hand out cards promoting his website, which explains the reasons for his fascination with Adolf Hitler.  
Mr Dutton, who reveals on his Twitter feed that his has been banned from Facebook as a result of his extreme views, appeared at the store in Cambridge at 2pm yesterday.
Several customers complained to staff prompting the manager to ask him to leave the store.
Police were also called to reports of 'nuisance behaviour' but Mr Dutton had left and they said they were not treating the incident as a crime.
One report yesterday said Mr Dutton had been seen before in the same supermarket with THREE others dressed in Nazi outfits.

'I wanted to make sure he was evicted. My grandmother's family were annihilated in the gas chambers. One lady was very upset - she was close to crying'
Polish-born shopper, Rosina Rusin

Polish-born shopper Rosina Rusin, 60, of Cambridge, said 'mouths were falling open' when they saw the sinister outfit.
She said: 'I was waiting in a queue when a lady came up and she was really quite distressed about it.
'People's mouths were falling open. You are not going to come out like that unless you want to draw attention to yourself.
'I wanted to make sure he was evicted. My grandmother's family were annihilated in the gas chambers and I thought "Here is this bloke parading about".
'One lady was very upset - she was close to crying.
'A young man told me that there are four of them that go in there dressed like that quite often.
'Apparently he said "I do not see why I have offended anyone". I have never realised how clownish the uniform is until I saw him masquerading about.'
Nazi fanatic Paul Dutton, who was asked to leave Asda in Cambridge, after wearing his Nazi SS uniform in the store
Nazi fanatic Paul Dutton, who was asked to leave Asda in Cambridge, after offending shoppers
Mr Dutton at home in Cambridge, left, and in the outfit he was wearing when he outraged customers in Asda, right. The uniform is similar to those worn by the brutal SS in Nazi Germany
Another shopped claimed she saw a swatiska tattooed on the man's hand.
Marisa Baker, 38, said: 'We had come from Toys 'R' Us and I thought it was a Salvation Army person at first.
'But then I saw the tattoo on his neck and a swastika on his hand. It's not what you want to see, especially as there's children around.'
Neil Doron, 40, of Cambridge, said: 'He was just standing there in all that gear. It's not very nice. At first I thought it was just a guy in costume.
'I do not think people should have that on at any time of year because of what it stands for. It's not nice for people in Cambridge.'
A Cambridgeshire police spokeswoman said: 'Literally he wasn't doing anything he was just standing in a uniform. He was asked to leave and he did.
'By the time we got there he had already gone. I guess we would have just given him some words of advice but there is not enough here for it to be considered a crime.
'It was reported to us by two members of the public who both said that he was standing outside the store.
'He didn't say anything, he didn't shout, he was just standing there and was eventually asked to leave.'
An Asda spokeswoman said: 'We had a number of customer complaints so we asked him to leave the store.'

How Hitler's bodyguards became genocidal murderers

One arm of the SS, the Waffen-SS, led by Heinrich Himmler, centre, took charge of the concentration camps across eastern Europe
The Waffen-SS, led by Heinrich Himmler, centre, ran concentration camps across eastern Europe where millions of Jews were gassed to death
The SS, Schutzstaffel or protective echelon, was created as an elite corps of the Nazi party.
The black-uniformed members, began their existence as a small personal bodyguard for Hitler.
But the group grew with the success of the Nazi movement to become a virtual state within a state.
Leader Heinrich Himmler built up the SS following from around 300 men at its formation in 1929 to more than 50,000 by the time the Nazis came to power in 1933.
Himmler, a racist fanatic, screened applicants for their supposed physical perfection and racial purity but recruited from all ranks of German society.
The SS gained power during the Night of the Long Knives in June 1934 when the Nazi regime committed a series of political murders.
Leading members of the left-wing faction of the Nazi party were slayed along with prominent conservative anti-Nazis.
Many of those killed were members of the SA, the paramilitary brownshirts.
Hitler used the purge to eliminate critics of his new regime, especially those loyal to Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen, and settle old scores with his enemies.
The Night of the Long Knives was a turning point in Hitler's leadership, establishing him firmly as leader and dictator of the state.
As a result the SS became an independent group answerable to Hitler alone.
Between 1934 and 1936, Himmler and his second-in-command Reinhard Heydrich, consolidated SS strength by gaining control of all of Germany's police forces.
By 1939 its numbers totalled around 250,000 men.
It was divided into two groups - the Allgemeine-SS (General SS) and Waffen-SS (Armed SS).
The Waffen-SS was responsible for running the concentration camps, and the mass murder of millions of Jews.
SS men were taught racial hatred and swore absolute loyalty to their Fuhrer, Hitler.
Their motto was: 'Thy honour is thy loyalty.'
Following the defeat of Nazi Germany by the Allies in 1945, the SS was declared a criminal organisation at the Nuremburg trials in 1946.

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