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Self-Proclaimed
Jesuit
Sect
Millionaire
Kills
Young
Daughter
London
based
executive's
wife in
court
said her
husband
awoke
the
morning
before
he
killed
his
daughter
at
4.30am
and
rambled
for
hours
about
the sect
and
talked
about
the
philosophy
of the
Jesuits,
the
court
heard.
By Greg
Szymanski
Jan. 12,
2008
A
London
business
executive,
who
brutally
murdered
his two
year old
daughter,
was
quoted
as
saying
in a
British
news
outlet
Friday
that "he
was part
of a
sect
based on
the
philosophies
of the
Jesuits
which
recruited
executives
like him
in order
to take
over the
financial
world."
Alberto
Izaga,
36, in
court
testimony
claimed
he
violently
killed
his
young
daughter
after
becoming
obsessed
with the
horror
film,
Bug.
Izaga
added
that he
shouted
"Die,
die,
die" and
"I have
to kill
her"
moments
after
repeatedly
smashing
his
daughter
Yanire's
head
against
a
wooden
floor in
his £1
million
flat
overlooking
the
Houses
of
Parliament.
In a
recent
article
appearing
in
the
Telegraph
newspaper
in England,
he
claimed
the
Jesuits
recruited
him,
causing
his
psychotic
episode.
The
article
by Nick
Allen
stated:
He was
hallucinating
and
hearing
voices
and had
become
convinced
his
family
were
possessed
by the
devil.
Izaga
believed
he was
"involved
in the
act of
destroying
a malign
and
Satanic
entity"
when he
attacked
his
daughter,
the
court
heard.
He
also
believed
he was
part of
a sect
based on
the
philosophies
of the
Jesuits
which
was
recruiting
executives
like him
and
trying
to take
over
the
financial
world.
The
court
heard
that
until
his
"psychotic"
episode
Izaga
was a
devoted
and
loving
father.
He
woke up
on June
3 last
year at
4.30am
and
began
ranting
about
God and
humanity
not
really
existing
and
calling
for the
little
girl to
die.
His
hysterical
wife
Ligia
tried to
stop him
but the
madness
could
not
have
been
predicted,
the
court
was
told.
On a ten
day
holiday
in
America
which
ended on
May 28,
last
year,
the
couple
had gone
to the
cinema
in New
York and
saw the
film Bug
in which
a man
and his
girlfriend
are
driven
mad by
bugs
under
the
skin.
On May
29, he
went to
Geneva
for a
conference
where he
also
became
affected
by a
motivational
talk by
an
adventurer.
On June
2, he
was back
in
London
but
complained
he was
exhausted
and had
not
slept
for 72
hours.
The
attack
happened
the next
morning
and
during
his
ranting
he
banged
his
fists
against
a pillow
saying
he
couldn't
sleep.
Mrs
Izaga
heard
him say:
"I know
what I
have to
do. I
have to
kill
her."
After
help
arrived,
Yanire
was
taken to
hospital
but died
two days
later.
Izaga
had been
a
brilliant
student,
athlete
and
businessman.
He was
at
the
height
of
career
working
as the
top
executive
at
insurance
giant
Swiss Re
based in
the
"Gherkin"
building
in
London.
Judge
Richard
Hone
told the
jury it
was "an
exceptional
case"
and that
it would
be asked
to find
Izaga
not
guilty
of
murder
through
insanity.
The
court
was told
Izaga
had been
transferred
to a
medium
secure
mental
hospital
and two
psychiatrists
were
agreed
that he
was
insane
at the
time of
the
attack.
The
facts of
the case
were not
disputed
and
Izaga
will be
sent to
a
mental
hospital
under
mental
health
legislation.
Izaga
sat in
court
next to
his
barrister
David
Perry
QC. He
was
dressed
in suit
and tie
and wore
glasses
and was
still
wearing
his
wedding
ring.
His wife
and
parents
were
also at
court.
Jonathan
Rees,
prosecuting,
said:
"If ever
a case
deserves
to be
described
as truly
tragic,
this is
surely
it.
"How
else can
you
describe
a case
in which
a
devoted
father
killed a
child he
loved in
front of
her
mother."
Mr Rees
said the
Spanish-born
businessman
was
considered
to be
"clever
and
driven"
at work
where he
was well
liked.
At
home, he
played a
full
part in
looking
after
his
daughter
and in
family
life.
"He was
the last
person
capable
of
killing
another
human
and
least of
all his
own
flesh
and
blood,"
said Mr
Rees.
"All
agreed,
he was
totally
devoted
to her
and that
the
defendant
had
described
his
daughter
as the
most
precious
person
on
earth."
A
neighbour
said "he
was one
the
nicest
men" he
had met
and
"absolutely
loved
Yanire".
Mr Rees
added:
"At 8am
on 3rd
of June,
he
killed
his
daughter
in a
frenzy.
He
smashed
her head
against
the
floor."
He
said
that
even
with
hindsight,
it was
difficult
to see
how the
attack
could
have
been
anticipated
or that
"he
would
lose
control
as he
did".
But
doctors
were
agreed
that at
the time
Izaga
was
suffering
"from an
episode
of acute
mental
illness
which
had a
rapid
onset".
Mr Rees
said the
night
before
the
attack,
Izaga
had
changed
the
child's
nappy
and
given
her
milk.
When she
woke at
8am, he
had gone
to her
cot and
picked
her up
and
brought
her into
the
living
room.
Mrs
Izaga,
also 36,
picked
up the
injured
child,
still
dressed
in her
nightgown,
put her
on a
sofa and
rang
999.
Part of
the
attack
had been
recorded
on a
neighbour's
voicemail
after
Mrs
Izaga
began
ringing
friends
for
help.
Her
husband
could be
heard
shouting
in
English
and
Spanish.
He
said:
"What
about
this,
what
about
this?
How am I
going to
sleep? I
just
want to
sleep."
He also
said:
"Bitch,
this
bastard
does not
die. God
does not
exist,
the
universe
does not
exist,
humanity
does not
exist."
When
police
and
paramedics
arrived
half an
hour
later,
Izaga
began
chanting
"Big
Ben, Big
Ben" for
five
minutes.
Later,
he began
to lick
the face
of a
neighbour
who came
to try
and help
him.
In
another
article,
crime
correspondent
for the
London
Times
said:
That
night
the
family
went to
bed, but
he woke
his wife
at
4.30am
and
rambled
for
hours
about
the sect
and
talked
about
the
philosophy
of the
Jesuits,
the
court
heard.
Troy,
one
internet
reader
of the
tragic
story,
had this
assessment:
"It is
my
assessment
that
Alberto
Izaga
had
received
NLP
(neuro-linguistic
programming)
&
audio-visual
mid-control
programming
(involving
being
triggered
by
thoughts
of the
movie
"Bug" &
also
involving
the
hypnotic
imagery
of the
clock,
as his
repeated
"Big
Ben"
mantra
would
suggest)
in
Geneva &
possibly
had been
spiked
with LSD
(this
leading
him to
not
sleeping
for
three
days).
"God
does not
exist,
the
universe
does not
exist,
humanity
does not
exist"
is pure
Satanic
atheistic
philosophy
& no
doubt
part of
Izaga's
programming.
His
supposed
belief
that he
was
"involved
in the
act of
destroying
a malign
and
Satanic
entity"
is a
typical
Catholic
external
projection
of an
internal
metaphysical
struggle.
The
Catholic
church
hierarchy
murdered
millions
of
non-papal
followers
during
the
Inquistion
using
the most
Satanic
methods
imaginable,
always
accusing
others
of of
the
evils of
their
own
Satanic
ways.
"Izaga's
purpose
would be
to have
him
state a
fact
that he
was
privy
to:
that "he
was part
of a
sect
based on
the
philosophies
of the
Jesuits
which
was
recruiting
executives
like him
and
trying
to take
over the
financial
world" &
have
this
announced
via
British
intelligence-controlled
print/internet
media.
Izaga's
murderous
behaviour
is
implied
to be
that of
a
randomly
deranged
madman,
thus
covered
up his
mind
control
& the
fact
that the
Jesuit
infiltration
of
all
avenues
of
international
power is
indeed
unparalleled.
"The
dual
purpose
of this
in its
effect
on the
general
public
is to
"mock
the
victim"
- to
laugh in
the face
of the
public
via
telling
them a
truth
that
they are
confidant
will not
be
understood
by most.
"A sad,
tragic
story.
God
bless
his poor
murdered
daughter
& her
grief-stricken
mother."
For
Telegraph
article
see:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=D5M524MCDGDZ1QFIQMGSFGGAVCBQWIV0?xml=/news/2008/01/11/nizaga111.xml
For
Times
article
see:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article3172614.ece
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