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Probe launched into filmed police attack

Authorities are investigating violent tactics used by Berlin police to subdue a man on Saturday. After shooting him in the leg, officers used pepper spray, kicked him in the head, and set a dog on him. The incident was caught on film.

Probe launched into filmed police attack
Photo: YouTube

The apparently deranged André C. was seen walking through the streets of the city’s Wedding district holding two knives and carrying an axe in his waistband on Saturday afternoon. A police car arrived and two officers jumped out of the car holding firearms. The situation escalated when the 50-year-old moved to attack the officers after they called on him to drop his weapons.

Eyewitnesses said a female officer fired at least five warning shots into the air, and then shot at the man, hitting him once in the calf and grazing his stomach twice. Reinforcements were called because the man still clung to one of his knives.

A video filmed by a passer-by and released on the Bild website shows five officers then surrounding the man sitting on the ground. They can be seen spraying him twice with pepper spray, hitting him on the arm with a baton, and kicking him in the back of the neck. One officer then appears to let a police dog bite him in the head.

André C. sustained severe injuries while he was being overpowered and later underwent emergency surgery. He was reported to be out of danger on Monday.

Several eyewitnesses gave a damning account of the police’s actions. “The policewoman looked totally frantic,” one local resident told the B.Z. newspaper. “She just kept screaming ‘drop the knife, drop the knife.’ ”

“The officers looked scared,” eyewitness Yessin B. said, while another told Bild newspaper, “The man looked defenceless, the police response seemed brutal.”

State criminal investigators have launched a routine investigation to determine whether the police’s violence was appropriate, while police unions were quick to defend the officers.

“Anyone who calls that brutal, I’d like to watch them wet themselves if they were in that situation,” said Bodo Pfalzgraf, head of the Berlin branch of police union DPolG. His counterpart Michael Purper of the GdP union added, “If the police shouts warnings, and even fires warning shots and the man still won’t drop the weapon, then resorting to violence is allowed.”

Berlin politicians also gave cautious support for the police. “After the warning shots, the man knew what he was letting himself in for,” said Christoph Lauer, security policy spokesman for the Berlin Pirate Party, who intends to raise the incident at a parliamentary committee meeting. “The video does not show what happened before and afterwards.”

But André C.’s nephew Martin K. said the police’s response was much too tough. “My uncle was already lying on the ground seriously injured,” he told B.Z., adding that he couldn’t explain his relative’s deranged behaviour.

The paper reported that André C. had got into an argument with “a group of Asians” that afternoon, had gone home to get something and was then stopped by the police.

“My uncle is usually a really nice guy who wouldn’t do anything to anyone,” said 23-year-old Martin K. “He just drinks a bit too much. His son died 10 years ago in an accident in Thailand, and his father died six weeks ago. He hasn’t really got over it yet.”

André C. has no previous convictions, though he has come to the police’s attention for misdemeanours including verbal abuse in the past three years.

The Local/bk

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CRIME

Teenager turns self in after attack on German politician

A 17-year-old has turned himself in to police in Germany after an attack on a lawmaker that the country's leaders decried as a threat to democracy.

Teenager turns self in after attack on German politician

The teenager reported to police in the eastern city of Dresden early Sunday morning and said he was “the perpetrator who had knocked down the SPD politician”, police said in a statement.

Matthias Ecke, 41, European parliament lawmaker for Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD), was set upon by four attackers as he put up EU election posters in Dresden on Friday night, according to police.

Ecke was “seriously injured” and required an operation after the attack, his party said.

Scholz on Saturday condemned the attack as a threat to democracy.

“We must never accept such acts of violence,” he said.

Ecke, who is head of the SPD’s European election list in the Saxony region, was just the latest political target to be attacked in Germany.

Police said a 28-year-old man putting up posters for the Greens had been “punched” and “kicked” earlier in the evening on the same Dresden street.

Last week two Greens deputies were abused while campaigning in Essen in western Germany and another was surrounded by dozens of demonstrators in her car in the east of the country.

According to provisional police figures, 2,790 crimes were committed against politicians in Germany in 2023, up from 1,806 the previous year, but less than the 2,840 recorded in 2021, when legislative elections took place.

A group of activists against the far right has called for demonstrations against the attack on Ecke in Dresden and Berlin on Sunday, Der Spiegel magazine said.

According to the Tagesspiegel newspaper, Interior Minister Nancy Faeser is planning to call a special conference with Germany’s regional interior ministers next week to address violence against politicians.

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