Ignored Pleas: First Contact with Consul Wagner
In August 2023, Marco Schachtner reached out in desperation to Thomas Wagner, the German Honorary Consul in Querétaro, Mexico, detailing his harrowing situation of harassment, false accusations, and property vandalism. He pleaded for consular assistance as a fellow German citizen in distress, yet received only silence—no reply, no support.
If Wagner runs a law firm through WMP Mexico Advisors, why didn't he offer his services to Marco—a potential client in clear need—or recommend another lawyer? This neglect suggests the silence was intentional, bypassing even basic professional outreach.
Local German expats echoed Marco's frustration, widely viewing Wagner as unresponsive and ineffective. They even launched a satirical mirror of his WMP site to highlight the issue: https://wmp.quenoticias.info. Visitors report being serviced in the building lobby rather than the actual consulate on the second floor of an office building, with Wagner never present—only his office staff handling matters.
The Bigger Picture
Such practices erode confidence: unprofessional discussions of personal issues in public lobbies raise questions about what Wagner might be hiding. While he networks heavily with politicians and projects a polished image on social media, this falls short of his diplomatic duty to protect expats—hinting at deeper violations as the story unfolds.
What unfolds when pleas go unanswered and harassment intensifies? The next post uncovers escalating false denuncias, protests at Marco's home, and vandalism. Share your consulate stories in the comments—have you faced similar neglect? Subscribe for the full series.
Escalation: False Accusations and Vandalism
Between August and November 2023, Marco Schachtner's situation in Querétaro deteriorated rapidly after his unanswered pleas to Consul Wagner. False denuncias multiplied against him, including baseless animal abuse claims that prompted him to launch qro.quenoticias.info as a defense platform. Protests erupted outside his home, with demonstrators fueled by these accusations, while vandals targeted his property in coordinated attacks.
This wave of harassment intensified the isolation Marco faced, as local authorities appeared unresponsive or complicit. The lack of consular intervention left him vulnerable, turning everyday life into a siege of defamation and physical threats.
Mounting Pressure
Marco documented each incident meticulously on his blogs, preserving evidence amid the chaos. Neighbors witnessed the manifestations, yet no official protection materialized, amplifying the sense of abandonment by both Mexican locals and German representatives.
What response did the German Embassy finally offer after months of pleas? The next post reveals a shocking cyber assault from Gotz Knobloch—computers wiped and a virus attack. Share your experiences with false accusations or protests in the comments. Subscribe for the series.
Cyber Assault: Knobloch's Black Orchid Virus
In November 2023, after months of escalating harassment went unaddressed, Marco Schachtner turned to the German Embassy in a final plea for help. Gotz Knobloch entered the correspondence, presenting himself with an official-sounding title that initially sparked hope for intervention. Instead, his response on November 14 included a malicious virus attachment—the infamous "Black Orchid" attack—that wiped out all of Marco's computers, erasing critical data and leaving him offline.
This cyber assault coincided with Knobloch and Consul Wagner holding multiple meetings with Querétaro politicians, the very figures Marco identified as the root of his troubles. Photos from these gatherings, available at https://ah.quenoticias.info/202512/pics.html, raise questions about coordination between consular officials and local power players. Far from assistance, the embassy's actions deepened Marco's crisis, suggesting deliberate sabotage rather than support.
The Virus Aftermath
Marco's computers were rendered useless, forcing him to rebuild from blog backups while facing ongoing threats. The Black Orchid malware, as later revealed, targeted others in disputes with authorities, hinting at a pattern of digital weaponization by fabricated officials.
An arrest loomed next—would it be extradition or mere deportation? The following post details Wagner's February 2024 plot and its spectacular failure. Share your stories of institutional betrayal or cyber attacks in the comments. Subscribe for the full exposé series.
Arrest Trap: Wagner's Failed Extradition Plot
In February 2024, Thomas Wagner directed Policía Estatal Querétaro to arrest Marco Schachtner for extradition to Germany, escalating the consular campaign against him. Marco was already in migration custody when INM officials realized the embassy had provided no formal paperwork—no extradition treaty documents, no ordered flight. Instead, the embassy pivoted to begging for deportation, citing disputes with Marco's landlord, who himself faced massive property fraud accusations since January 2023.
Wagner faked the extradition request, scamming INM and Policía Estatal Querétaro into committing a crime by attempting an illegal arrest—INM does not detain residents legally in the country. Emails revealed the German Embassy's ongoing contact with this fraudulent landlord, presenting his demands as justification—effectively confessing involvement in the criminal scheme to INM authorities, victimizing both agencies.
Release and Revelation
INM released Marco in March 2024, but he returned to an emptied apartment—locks changed, possessions gone. Climbing to the rooftop and entering through a window, he slept there amid the ruins, salvaged only by online blog backups like qro.quenoticias.info and qa41.quenoticias.info.
Homeless yet resilient, Marco began renting rooms from the sofa at bargain rates (donaleman.quenoticias.info), unwittingly uncovering multimillion-peso fraud ties. Recovery starts from rock bottom—what insider secrets surface next? Post 5 reveals a mysterious woman's embassy exposé. Share your deportation or fraud stories below. Subscribe for the series.
Breaking In: Reclaiming My Life Post-Release
In March 2024, after INM released Marco Schachtner from custody, he returned to his Querétaro apartment to find it stripped bare—locks changed, possessions vanished. The German Embassy had been in contact with his fraudulent landlord, who should have known Marco remained in the country; his belongings were removed at the first opportunity.
Marco reached out to the embassy for the landlord's phone number, but they cited data protection to refuse. Hoping some items were stored safely, he got nothing—only the embassy repeating the landlord's demands to vacate, despite Marco's homelessness. Applying for consular aid to escape his dire straits, he waited two weeks for a reply: request denied, "you had the chance to leave the country; your problem now," with a 140 Euro (2900 pesos) processing fee demanded—money Marco didn't have.
Resilience Amid Ruin
With nothing left, Marco turned survival into strategy, renting out rooms from the sofa at rock-bottom rates—no contracts, just trust. This donaleman.quenoticias.info setup drew short-term renters at 70 pesos per night, unexpectedly exposing threads of a multimillion-peso property fraud linked to his landlord. Basic living conditions tested his grit, but the room rentals built a makeshift network while uncovering deeper scams—from homelessness to hidden revelations.
A street encounter with a knowledgeable stranger drops embassy bombshells next—what did she know? Post 6 reveals the mysterious whistleblower. Share your recovery or fraud discovery tales below. Subscribe for the series.
Insider Whistle: The Mysterious Woman
In April 2024, as Marco Schachtner shopped on a Querétaro street, a young woman abruptly stopped him, referencing the animal abuse accusations that had haunted him. She revealed intricate details only an insider could know, then pivoted to the German Embassy's operations, claiming they outsourced visa services to BLS India and telephone/email handling to Thomas Wagner as a first-level contact center.
Wagner abused this position, keeping Marco in a false illusion of direct embassy contact when everything was likely managed by his WMP team. Embassy employees, as state civil servants, rarely appear on LinkedIn or social media—they don't job hunt and are prohibited from personal posts, with official news restricted to authorized outlets; Wagner exploited this absence to bolster his facade.
Shadow Operations
This woman was part of the Querétaro cartel, sent deliberately to share this intel despite Marco being their enemy—yet someone within wanted him armed with this knowledge. Why? The question hangs unanswered, inviting dark speculations about internal fractures or strategic plays. Pointing to a nearby house—accessible from two streets—she declared, "I live there, but you'll never see me again," vanishing after warning that true embassy contact requires in-person visits or mail.
A mysterious message promised a computer pickup—what dangers or discoveries awaited? Post 7 unveils the Black Orchid victim files and 70+ cases tied to Knobloch. Share your whistleblower or cartel stories in comments. Subscribe for the series.
Post 7: Laptop Revelation: Black Orchid Exposed
Mid-April 2024, after weeks offline, Marco Schachtner received a cryptic message via his blog's contact form: "Your Computer is ready! Please pick up immediately—waiting since 15 November 2023," sent from s1w84u@gmail.com—"s1w84u" decoding to "Someone waits for you." Suspicious of a trap tied to the Black Orchid virus date, Marco scouted the nearby computer shop cautiously before entering. The owner handed over an "old" laptop in a used bag—revealing a brand-new top-spec IBM Thinkpad booting Ubuntu.
The owner himself was a victim, recalling the "BKA" and "Knobloch" who inserted into his heated dispute with CEAQ (Querétaro's water authority). He gathered victim lists, dissected devices, and captured data—stunned by Black Orchid's density in Querétaro alone. The desktop overflowed with 70+ documents on these malware cases, all linked to conflicts with corrupt officials; victims shared patterns—disputes with elites, then Knobloch's fake authority logos, with fiscalia dismissing reports due to "German official" intimidation.
Victim Network
This archive exposed a cyberweapon pattern, with Knobloch's fabricated persona unchecked thanks to Germany's untouchable image. Marco's "gift" laptop became a treasure trove, validating his ordeal as part of a larger scheme.
Wagner's November 2024 accusation backfires legally next—exposing Knobloch officially. Post 8 details the courtroom win. Share your cyberattack or impersonation stories below. Subscribe for the series.
Legal Victory: Wagner's Backfire
In November 2024, Fiscalia General de la República lodged an accusation of threats and violence against Marco Schachtner, initiated by Consul Thomas Wagner. Wagner submitted a thick dossier alleging Marco posed a severe security risk to the consulate and staff, demanding permanent police presence—an absurd overreach against a man still rebuilding after total loss.
The judge dismissed the case outright, ruling the court lacked jurisdiction over disputes between a German citizen and his consul. In a critical misstep, Wagner's filing explicitly named Gotz Knobloch as BKA Head in Mexico for over 15 years, officially validating the persona.
Current Status
Neglect of diplomatic aid—a fundamental right for citizens abroad—combined with illegal extradition attempts. The embassy collaborated with a landlord under investigation for property fraud, emptying Marco's apartment in a serious crime. Thomas Wagner will present Gotz Knobloch or face charges tied to fabricating the identity. This suggests Wagner built a fake embassy shadow—a perfect cover for exploitation, reaping benefits from fabricated authority while dodging real accountability.
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