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Sylvia Schultz (R) and Ivo Sasek address a conference of the Anti-Censorship Coalition in November 2012.
A German lawyer may face prosecution for questioning the Holocaust and making an argument that there is 'no evidence' to prove the event.

Sylvia Schultz denied the Holocaust during a conference of the Anti-Censorship Coalition held in the canton of Graubunden, Switzerland, in November 2012.

According to reports, Daniel Kettiger, a Bernese lawyer, has filed a criminal complaint against Schultz at the Graubunden Prosecutors Office.
The German lawyer had said during the conference that the Holocaust had never been proven in court as it would have lacked the findings of the crime scenes and killing methods and the number of deaths, perpetrators, corpses or traces of a murder.
Schultz had also argued that there was also no "testimony, documents or other evidence."

Schultz is not the only person for whom a criminal complaint has been filed. Ivo Sasek, the organizer of the Anti-Censorship Coalition conference also faces similar prosecution.

MYA/HSN/MA