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Wednesday, July 11, 2012

"Russian Female Punk Band, "Pussy Riot" Arrested For Hooliganism"

Russian court refuses bail for female punk band Pussy Riot | The Raw Story

  
Protester for punk rock band Pussy Riot Nuria Fatych / Flickr

 The controversy over the provocatively named Russian punk rock group Pussy Riot, which profaned an Orthodox altar by singing an obscene anti-Putin "prayer" in Moscow's most important cathedral, notched up this week when a court refused to grant bail to three of the female band's alleged members. Their court date is July 24...They have been in jail since last February. If convicted they could get up to 7 years in prison...

Comment..."Hooliganism".. I haven't heard that word in years...In the United States they are stealing millions and getting away with murder..  Obama would be inviting them to the White House for a freedom of speech award..Believe me, I don't make this stuff up...Hilary should be over there straightening this mess out...Hooliganism, I can't get over that...

The women will be held until a court date is set for their trial, which will not happen until at least July 24.
The women will be held until a court date is set for their trial, which will not happen until at least July 24.

The controversy over the provocatively named Russian punk rock group Pussy Riot, which profaned an Orthodox altar by singing an obscene anti-Putin "prayer" in Moscow's most important cathedral, notched up this week when a court refused to grant bail to three of the female band's alleged members.
The women will be held until a court date is set for their trial, which will not happen until at least July 24.

Temp Headline ImageA combination photos shows members of female punk band 'Pussy Riot,' (l.-r.) Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alyokhina, and Yekaterina Samutsevich, behind bars during a court hearing in Moscow on July 4. Three members of the all-woman punk band 'Pussy Riot' were detained in February after they profaned an Orthodox altar by singing an obscene anti-Putin 'prayer' in Moscow's most important cathedral.(Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters)
The controversy over the provocatively named Russian punk rock group Pussy Riot, which profaned an Orthodox altar by singing an obscene anti-Putin "prayer" in Moscow's most important cathedral, notched up this week when a court refused to grant bail to three of the female band's alleged members.

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