He was observed by a radio patrol on the evening of December 24, 2021 as he crossed the intersection on red. When asked about it by officers, he did not respond. “He didn’t say a word. At the time I didn’t know that he had autism. I explained to him countless times that he had committed an administrative offense and that we had to see an ID card,” said the senior of the three police officers Judge. He suspected that the man was under the influence of drugs or alcohol “or not on good terms with the police,” as the official put it. A younger colleague thought the man was a state objector, as she put it on record.
Aggressive because he went back
When it became clear that the identification had to be enforced, the man “went back,” said the officer: “It seemed very aggressive to us. His face turned red. He raised his hands, clenched his fists.”
The 30-year-old was then brought to the ground and restrained in a prone position, resulting in a laceration that later required stitches and a chipped tooth. When putting on the handcuffs, the three police officers had difficulties in that the officer “unfortunately is not the strongest,” as she admitted in court, and the third was a trainee who had only been on duty on the street for three weeks.
Should have kicked
The public prosecutor accused the accused of kicking around while lying on his stomach and fixed to the ground and thus resisting his arrest. When reinforcements later arrived, he is said to have tried to give a police officer who had been called in a targeted kick in the knee.
The defendant, who was carefully escorted into the courtroom by his mother and defense attorney Helmut Graupner, pleaded not guilty. At first it was unclear whether any communication would take place with him at all. Probably not least because of judge Philipp Schnabel’s careful conduct of the negotiations, the 30-year-old then answered the questions put to him very quietly, but quite understandably. “It’s not true that I tried to hit a police officer,” he said. Which is why when the police shouted “It’s red!” He couldn’t say that he didn’t react and then didn’t show his ID. One of the police officers came up to him and put a hand on his shoulder or pushed him: “I pushed his hand away because I didn’t see it as a justified action.” Then he was brought to the ground: “I didn’t kick.”
Source: Nachrichten