More than twelve years after the murder of anti-fascist rapper Pavlos Fyssas, a Greek appeals court has delivered a decisive and final verdict against the neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn, upholding convictions against 42 defendants and confirming that the organisation operated as a criminal syndicate masquerading as a legitimate political party.
The ruling, handed down in Athens on Wednesday, marks the conclusion of one of the most consequential political trials in modern European history.

The appeals court found all seven members of Golden Dawn’s leadership guilty of directing a criminal organisation.
Those convicted include the party’s founder and long-standing leader Nikos Michaloliakos, former European Parliament member Yiannis Lagos, ex-party spokesman Ilias Kasidiaris, and four other senior figures: Christos Pappas, Ilias Panagiotaros, Giorgos Germenis, and Artemis Matthaiopoulos.
A further 24 defendants, including 11 former Members of Parliament, were convicted of membership of the criminal organisation, with sentences of up to 15 years in prison.
The court also upheld convictions relating to two of the organisation’s most notorious acts of violence.
Fatal stabbing
Giorgos Roupakias, who admitted carrying out the fatal stabbing of Pavlos Fyssas in 2013, had his murder conviction reaffirmed, along with his conviction for membership of the criminal organisation.
Fifteen additional defendants were found guilty of involvement in the killing.
The court likewise upheld convictions arising from the violent assault on a group of Egyptian fishermen in the Athens suburb of Keratsini in 2012, a savage attack carried out by the party’s paramilitary “assault squads.”
Over 200 anti-fascists, many bearing photographs of Fyssas, gathered outside the Athens tribunal to hear the verdict. Among them was Magda Fyssas, the murdered musician’s mother, who has become a central figure in the long fight for justice.
Prosecutor Kyriaki Stefanatou had argued in her closing submissions that Michaloliakos exercised complete control over the organisation and full knowledge of its activities.
Systematic attacks
She described Golden Dawn as “a genuine child of Nazi ideology”, deploying that ideology to justify systematic attacks on migrants, political opponents, and vulnerable groups.

The ruling is the final step in a process that began with the original landmark trial in 2020, itself the culmination of an investigation that took more than five years.
That trial found Golden Dawn guilty of operating under a military-style hierarchy modelled on Hitler’s Nazi party, with Michaloliakos at its head for over three decades.
In his sentencing at that time, he received 13 and a half years in prison. He was, controversially, released on health grounds in September 2025, less than halfway through his sentence, a decision condemned as scandalous by lawyers representing the Fyssas family.
Golden Dawn’s rise was a product of Greece’s economic catastrophe.
Capitalising on public anger at austerity measures and exploiting fears of rising immigration, the party entered parliament for the first time in 2012 and, at its peak, became Greece’s third-largest political force, drawing around 400,000 votes.
It retained seats until 2019. In its early years the party openly glorified Adolf Hitler in its publications, later softening its public language to present itself as a nationalist movement.
Its support was notably concentrated amongst police officers and, disturbingly, extended to some clergy, with priests and monks attending party rallies.
The aftermath of the original trial has done little to extinguish the far-right embers Golden Dawn stoked. Former spokesman Kasidiaris, currently serving 13 years and six months, is widely believed to have been instrumental in the emergence of the Spartans, a hardline far-right party that won seats in the 2023 Greek parliamentary elections, and currently holds two seats.
Fascist salute
But the connections run deeper still: Lagos, extradited from Belgium in 2021 after being stripped of his European Parliament immunity, was represented at his appeal by Constantinos Plevris, a far-right ideologue.
In 2022 he performed a fascist salute in court and was subsequently expelled from the Athens Bar Association. His son, Thanos Plevris, serves as Greece’s current Migration Minister.
The ruling was welcomed by Nikos Dendias, who served as police minister at the time of the original Golden Dawn arrests and is now Greece’s Defence Minister. He described it as a historic milestone for the Greek justice system and the rule of law.
For anti-fascists and the families of Golden Dawn’s victims, the verdict represents hard-won but vital confirmation that political violence carried out under the banner of a parliamentary party has not gone unanswered.









