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Identity theft victim hounded by Austria for child support

A German man who was falsely accused of fathering an Austrian boy and received demands for child support payments after his identity was stolen has said he plans to sue the Austrian authorities for damages.

Identity theft victim hounded by Austria for child support
Horst with his real son. Photo: Private

The 32-year-old man, named in Austrian media only as Horst W., said he was astonished to receive a letter from a court in the state of Salzburg in January last year, informing him that he owed child support of at least €200 a month to an Austrian woman and her then five-year-old son – who he was supposed to have fathered. He was told the payments were due until 2020.

“I was stunned,” Horst, from Leverkusen, said. He had never met the woman from Kuchl in Salzburg before, and realised that he must be the victim of identity theft. In 2011 he had received a call from the police telling him that an identity card he had lost in 2007 was being used in Austria.

Horst said that a long battle with Austrian bureaucrats followed. “It was all very hectic. I had to find a lawyer as soon as possible – and at first nobody wanted to take the case on,” he told Austria’s Kurier newspaper.

On June 15th last year he had to appear in court in Hallein. “The court quickly established that I couldn’t be the boy’s father, because I never had sex with the woman – something she testified to.”

However, the Austrian youth welfare authority refused to believe the court’s verdict and continued to pursue Horst for the child support payments.  “They had found a scapegoat and they insisted I pay”, he said. It was only when he got in touch with an Austrian television series which was investigating controversial court cases that the youth welfare authority backed down.  

Hallein district commissioner Helmut Fürst said that he only found out about the case when he was contacted by journalists from Austrian broadcaster ORF. “The next day I told the youth welfare office to withdraw their demands,” he said, conceding that officials had gone totally overboard but that they had only been “prioritising the child's welfare”.

In mid-December Austria’s supreme court ruled that Horst was not the father and he was finally off the hook. However, he still owes his lawyer more than €4,000, which he says is “a hell of a lot of money” considering he doesn’t earn much from his job as a chef in a canteen and he has his own family and young son to support.

He has taken out a loan to cover his lawyer’s fees and now wants to sue Hallein’s youth welfare office for damages. “We’re still considering what to do, but a lawsuit looks likely,” his lawyer Karl-Heinz Pühl said.

Horst still hasn’t received an apology from the Austrian officials but says that he feels sorry for the Austrian single mother and her son. “She apologized to me for what had happened. I thought she seemed really nice. She seemed quite sad – she had fallen in love with a man she never really knew.”

Meanwhile police in Austria are still looking for the fraudster and real father of the boy and say that there have been reports matching his description in Upper Austria, Styria and Salzburg.

“We’re certain that he will soon be found,” police spokeswoman Valerie Hillebrand said.

CRIME

UPDATED: Vienna police investigating possible ‘threat’ to Donau Zentrum shopping centre

The Viennese police have confirmed they are investigating a possible - and unspecified - threat to the popular shopping centre in the city's 22nd district.

UPDATED: Vienna police investigating possible 'threat' to Donau Zentrum shopping centre

The Vienna police confirmed they are investigating a non-specified threat to the Donau Zentrum shopping centre, located in the Austrian capital’s 22nd district, a spokesperson told The Local. 

On Monday, pictures of an alleged internal document sent by the shopping centre to tenants circulated on social media and messaging apps. The document stated there was a “threat against the Westfield Donau Zentrum for April 30, 2024”. It stated that the authorities had been working to identify suspects since yesterday.

“The source of the threat is a photo circulating online”, the statement said without giving further details. “If we receive additional information or specifications, we will immediately inform you”, it added.

“There is currently no reason for you as an employee to worry as we are strictly following police guidelines”, the document said. It was signed by a manager of the shopping centre. The Local reached out to Donau Zentrum media representatives, who confirmed a threat against the centre.

“The Center Management of Westfield Donau Zentrum can confirm a threat against the center and is in ongoing communication with the relevant authorities. We are taking the situation seriously. The safety of everyone in the center is our top priority. After coordination with the authorities, the center will be open as usual today”, they said.

The Vienna police confirmed the veracity of the statement and added, “We are aware of the matter and are investigating,” they replied after an inquiry on their official social media channels. The Local reached out to the press office for further clarification but has not yet received a response.

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