An insight on what was committed by the spy president and his associates. Head of Cairo Criminal Court, Counselor Shabaan Al Shamy, closed the curtain on the trial of ousted President Mohamed Morsi in espionage and jailbreak from Wadi Al Natrun Prison cases. He sentenced the defendants to death for the martyrdom of Colonel Mohamed Mabrouk and Head of the Homeland Security Division in charge of the Muslim Brotherhood, General Adel Azab, who bravely testified in the two cases. This outcome was reached thanks to the efforts of a valiant team that included officers and prosecutors. They exerted all their efforts to provide the court with indisputable evidence paving the way for the courageous judge to issue his verdict. This case did not begin, as some people claim, with Morsi's escape report considered by Judge Khaled Mahgoub who had condemned Morsi and his associates while they were still at the pinnacle of their power. It started in December 2010 with a meeting, monitored by then-State Security, between Morsi and a U.S. Intelligence officer at the MB's Gesr Al Suez headquarters. The follow-up process continued to monitor important contacts between MB communications' official, Ahmed Abdel Atty, the director of the ousted president's office, Morsi and the U.S. intelligence officer in Cairo. These interactions led to the decision taken by Egypt's Attorney General to imprison Morsi and his associates in Wadi Al Natrun Prison. Then, Morsi escaped aided by Hamas who stormed the prison with a number of Bedouins, while the case returned to the court to be reconsidered after the June 30 Revolution. Martyr Mohamed Mabrouk monitored the details of this case from the start. He described the terrorist group's scheme during his historic testimony for which he sacrificed his life. This plan started with the meeting held in Damascus in November 2010, two months before January 25. It was held under the auspices of the MB and in coordination with the International Organization of the Muslim Brotherhood. Imam Khomeni's Advisor, Ali Akbar Velayati, a leader of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, Ali Fadwa, and Head of Hamas' Political Bureau, Khaled Mashaal participated in the meeting during which an agreement was reached. The Iranian Revolutionary Guards would provide MB members with training to send them from the Gaza Strip into Egypt after the January 25 demonstrations. The main objective of this plan was to paralyze Egypt's police by targeting 160 police stations simultaneously, storming the prisons to free the elements of Hamas, Hezbollah and the Bedouins who participated in the bombings of Dahab, Sharm Al Sheikh and Taba. The move aimed at inducing a state of chaos. Mabrouk did not stop at that. He also provided evidence of the MB's involvement in the killing of protestors in Tahrir and other Egyptian squares during the January 25 Revolution. He revealed the agreement between the terrorist group and Hamas members to shoot protestors, pinning it on police forces. He explained how they executed their plan on January 28, when they infiltrated the North Sinai Governorate through the tunnels in coordination with some Bedouins and MB residents. They used four-wheel cars, equipped with RPGs and machine guns. Mabrouk wasn't the only one to drop bombshells in court. Former Defense Minister, Hussein Tantawy denied, during his testimony in Mubarak's trial, the presence of police snipers' existence on the rooftops surrounding the squares. He stressed that these claims were completely false, adding that he was receiving daily reports from the Central Command of events across the country. Tantawy said that these reports revealed the involvement of elements affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood in shooting protestors from rooftops. The testimony of former Head of Egypt's Intelligence Agency, Morad Mowafi corroborated these fact. He said that his predecessor, Omar Soliman had told him that Hamas was present in Tahrir Square. He clearly blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for the murders and violent acts witnessed during the demonstrations to paralyze the state institutions, including Police and military forces. The different incidents occurring in the country, from January 25 until the killing of three judges last Saturday in retaliation for Morsi's death sentence, prove that the Muslim Brotherhood and their allies should bear the responsibility of the violence witnessed in Egypt. We said, since day 1, that no police officer received orders to shoot Egyptians. The different incidents prove this reality ratified by the historic verdict to sentence Morsi and his comrades to death.