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Stanley Brown: Zurich Prosecutors on a Witch Hunt

On 5 November 2024, Tages-Anzeiger published the story of Stanley Brown — an ordeal that, since the days of the Stasi of the former German Democratic Republic, one would scarcely expect to be authored by public authorities — except, it seems, in Switzerland. This is no “American dream,” but a psychological ordeal scripted with a distinctly sadistic undertone: a script conceived by bureaucrats steeped in the narrow-minded inertia of the Swiss justice system.

Nothing sensational in the conventional sense: no physical torture. “Only” psychological terror struck Stanley Brown* with the force of a lightning bolt — deliberate, systematic, calculated. Designed to break a human being. In the GDR, such methods were explicitly termed Zersetzung — the systematic “decomposition” of an opponent. Psychological warfare of this kind is no less cruel than physical torture; it is suffering engineered with intent. These are the scripts of sadistic desk perpetrators — and they are not confined to history.

A Witch Hunt Too Complex to Tell?

Stanley Brown’s story is multilayered, nuanced — and unmistakably of public interest. Journalist Quentin Schlapbach acknowledges as much at the outset:

“To present the case in all its details and twists would exceed the scope of this article.”

Indeed, a full account would overwhelm a single piece. By setting this expectation, the article implicitly narrows its ambition: only the most essential elements could be presented. Much — perhaps critically important — inevitably remains obscured. Some aspects might warrant stories of their own. Whether Tages-Anzeiger intends to publish a follow-up remains unclear.

What is clear, however, is that Brown himself did not approve the final version. On the contrary, he withdrew his consent entirely prior to publication. As the newspaper noted: “The editorial team spoke with Brown several times over recent days and weeks. However, he withdrew his quotations shortly before publication.”

Brown later described the article to Zurich Observer as one-sided — a criticism not without merit, given the selective presentation of facts. The more details are omitted or simplified, the more fragmented and blurred the narrative inevitably becomes. The paper’s own disclaimer about the limits of coverage underscores the inherent complexity of the case.

Public Interest — or Public Exposure?

Of particular significance is that the article was published without the protagonist’s consent.

The editorial board deemed the case to be of public interest — sufficiently so to prevail over numerous competing stories. Publication proceeded despite the withdrawal of consent; the story was considered too important to suppress.

But what kind of “public interest” is at stake?

Was the intention to expose the humiliation Brown had already endured at the hands of Zurich authorities — effectively subjecting him to public ridicule once again, this time before a wider audience? Brown was not merely ridiculed; he was, by his account, systematically broken by a witch hunt.

Or does the publication cater to a more troubling instinct: the voyeuristic appeal of misfortune? Is this, at least in part, sensationalism designed to attract readership through Schadenfreude?

In recent decades, the media’s interpretation of “public interest” has become increasingly aligned with circulation figures and market value. Appealing to base instincts has long been a hallmark of tabloid journalism — such as Switzerland’s Blick or Germany’s Bild. 

The fact that Brown’s story appeared in Tages-Anzeiger, rather than in a tabloid, suggests a different intent. It is unlikely that the primary aim was to indulge voyeuristic curiosity.

Abuse of Power: A Watchdog Awakened

The deeper reason lies elsewhere: Brown’s case reflects patterns of abuse of power significant enough to trigger the newspaper’s role as a public watchdog.

Zurich Observer has also reviewed case files. While the full scope cannot be contained within a single article, one conclusion emerges with striking clarity: authorities in Zurich appear to have pursued a politically motivated campaign against a British citizen — potentially fuelled by resentment toward his activities and their consequences for segments of Switzerland’s financial elite.

Background context suggests that certain Swiss bankers faced — or might have faced — criminal proceedings abroad, following investigations linked to Brown’s actions. This dimension, notably, was not addressed in the Tages-Anzeiger article — not even hinted at, although it could have been framed without compromising anonymity.

The campaign against Brown reportedly employed psychological methods closely resembling those historically used by the Stasi for Zersetzung. Whether politically or personally motivated — or both — the parallels are difficult to ignore.

Accountability at the Top

If authorities in the Canton of Zurich are indeed resorting to witch hunts using Stasi methods against perceived adversaries, accountability must follow. Responsibility does not end at the operational level; it extends upward. As the saying goes, crap rolls downhill.

The official at the centre of the case is public prosecutor Daniela Senn (MLaw), formerly of the Zurich-Sihl Public Prosecutor’s Office** — a figure already familiar to Zurich Observer from previous reporting.

Her subsequent transfer in 2024 to a division handling organised crime introduces an additional dynamic: public criticism may now carry reputational risks by association. This may inadvertently raise the threshold for scrutiny. It is therefore important to note that the actions in question occurred prior to her reassignment.

* “Stanley Brown” is the pseudonym used by Tages-Anzeiger for the anonymous subject of the article “Questionable prosecution: Switzerland issues Europe-wide search for 73-year-old pensioner — abroad, observers shake their heads” (5 November 2024). His real identity is known to Zurich Observer.

** Daniela Senn transferred in 2024, shortly before publication of Schlapbach’s article, from the Zurich-Sihl Public Prosecutor’s Office to Public Prosecutor’s Office II (Organised Crime Division).
Media:
The publication by the Swiss Tages-Anzeiger on November 5, 2024, was not the first to report on this case: the British Telegraph had already covered it in 2021.
Over the course of 2024, Stanley Brown also contacted Beobachter and the Zurich Observer; according to him, the Beobachter editor abruptly terminated contact after several emails in August 2024, citing alleged “personal issues.”

Switzerland’s Inhumane Art of Punishing Words

A conviction in the Swiss canton of Berne exposes a system that reacts with punishment instead of common sense, Switzerland’s inhumane art of punishing words?

In the Swiss canton of Berne, a man from Syria received a conditional fine for calling a female doctor “disrespectful” and “inhumane”, among other things. Taking Switzerland’s inhumane art of punishing words to new heights, “the 29-year-old Syrian has now been convicted by the public prosecutor’s office for defamation by summary penalty order (20min.ch).

Punishing Words

20 Minuten uses a sensationalist headline: “Man (29) calls doctor ‘incompetent’ – now he has a criminal record.” But let’s be honest: calling the doctor ‘incompetent’ is almost certainly not the reason for the conviction.

The decisive word is “inhumane.”

20 Minuten writes: “Specifically, he wrote: ‘How can someone like Dr. (XXXXX) work as a doctor? Cheeky / Incompetent / Inhumane / Disrespectful.’ With this rating, the man degraded the doctor as a human being, according to the prosecutor.”

The phrase “degraded her as a human being” clearly points to “inhumane.”

And yes: calling someone “inhumane” can constitute a criminal offense in Switzerland, because it can be interpreted as an attack on their human dignity – especially when grammatically applied to the person, not to their actions.

Why “inhumane” matters legally

Linguistically, “inhumane” modifies the person, not the conduct.

Had he written:

• “The treatment was inhumane,”

this would have been a figurative description of medical care.

But he wrote:

• “Someone like Dr. X … inhumane.”

This directly targets the human being, not the medical procedure.

Under Swiss law (Art. 177 StGB), that crosses into criminal insult.

The context makes the conviction feel absurd

In a medical context, anyone with basic common sense understands “inhumane” as a metaphor describing harsh, cold, or empathy-lacking treatment, not a biological denial of personhood.
Even a child understands that.

But Swiss prosecutors applied the law in the most rigid, literal, unforgiving way possible, punishing words.

The man did not linguistically attach the adjective to the treatment but to the doctor. That is the entire technicality on which this case rests.

And then there is the human dimension of punishing words

There are several obvious problems:

1. The man is not a native German speaker.

Coming from Syria, it is extremely likely he simply did not grasp the semantic nuance between criticizing a person and criticizing a medical procedure.

Any reasonable person would forgive that instantly.

2. The doctor actually filed a criminal complaint.

That alone tells you everything about their personality.

Most likely a younger doctor, part of the classic “generation assh*le” cohort of physicians: highly educated, financially cushioned (papa paid for university), professionally confident, but emotionally hyper-defensive and authoritarian.

3. Swiss prosecutors love cases like this.

Unlike the UK or US, Swiss prosecution has a deeply rooted authoritarian, formalistic, punitive culture.

Many prosecutors end up in the job precisely because they enjoy exercising power over others. This is a systemic selection issue in Switzerland: give small people a lot of power, and they will (ab)use it.

4. Xenophobia plays a role.

It is no secret that Swiss law enforcement and prosecution act more aggressively against foreigners, especially men from the Middle East or with darker skin.

This pattern repeats itself again and again.

What he was allowed to say

Statements that criticize professional behavior, not the person, are legally protected opinions:

  • “incompetent”
  • “cheeky” / “arrogant”
  • “disrespectful”

As long as they reflect subjective impressions connected to medical interaction, they fall under free expression.

Even if incorrect, they would at worst fall under civil law (unfair competition), not criminal law.

The word “inhumane” is the single pivot that moved this case into the penal code.

Conclusion

Formally, the conviction is legally correct under Swiss law.

But on a substantive, human, and cultural level, it is:

  • overly harsh
  • blind to linguistic nuance
  • unforgiving toward a non-native speaker
  • and deeply revealing of Swiss prosecutorial and medical power culture (authoritarian)

It exposes a system that reacts with punishment instead of common sense, Switzerland’s inhumane art of punishing words.