Gaie France was a pedophile magazine published by [[Michel Caignet]], a neo-Nazi child pornographer and former member of the Fane and FNE (European Nationalist Groups). The magazine combined photographs of male adolescents with Nazi nostalgia, featuring children at times scantily dressed in the attire of Hitler Youth. Gaie France mostly dealt in softcore child pornography, with photographs of naked children posed artistically. The magazine and others like it published by [[Michel Caignet]] formed part of the distribution infrastructure for child exploitation materials linked to the [[Toro Bravo]] production network.[^1] In the late 1980s, [[Joseph Douce]], a Belgian pastor who founded the Centre du Christ Liberateur (CCL), distributed and managed the subscription list for Gaie France. A prior investigation into [[Michel Caignet]] and his [[Toro Bravo]] associates in 1989 led to the arrest of [[Nicolas Glencross]], a British-born French priest who was using his rectory in the French commune of Saint-Leger-des-Vignes to take softcore child pornography photographs of the type [[Michel Caignet|Caignet]] had published in Gaie France. The connection between [[Nicolas Glencross]] and the [[Toro Bravo]] neo-Nazi pornographers was through [[Joseph Douce]].[^1] A prosecution linked the trade with [[Michel Caignet|Caignet]] as a neo-Nazi activist and publisher of the outlawed Gaie France magazine. [[Joseph Douce|Douce]]'s contacts with [[Michel Caignet|Caignet]] and his association with Nazi ideology through Gaie France formed part of the evidence in the broader investigation into the international child pornography distribution network.[^1] ### Footnotes [^1]: Dovey, S. (2023). *Eye of the Chickenhawk*. United States: Thehotstar.