The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Man (38) dies on a walk! Police speak of death in seconds

2020-04-14T20:34:24.553Z


A 38-year-old man from the Geisenbrunn district of Gilching lost his life during a walk on Easter Monday. The autopsy on Tuesday confirmed that there was no external fault.


A 38-year-old man from the Geisenbrunn district of Gilching lost his life during a walk on Easter Monday. The autopsy on Tuesday confirmed that there was no external fault.

  • A man died in a walk in Gilching.
  • Another passerby found the 38-year-old lying lifeless on the street in the middle of the night.
  • Autopsy reveals: There is no external fault.

    Tuesday, April 14, 6.40 p.m .: Fresh flowers, candles, last greetings written by hand - the little green strip in front of the maypole in Geisenbrunn has been a place of mourning since Monday. The night before, a 38-year-old resident of the Gilching district had died while walking. The autopsy at the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Munich confirmed the first suspicion of the criminal police on Tuesday: According to this, the man died without any outside influence. A spokesman for the police headquarters in Upper Bavaria explained to the Starnberg Mercury .

    As reported, the 38-year-old had wanted to breathe fresh air again on Easter Monday. At around 1.50 a.m., another passerby who wanted to fetch cigarettes found him lifeless and covered in blood on the main street near the maypole. The location is only a few minutes' walk from the 38-year-old's apartment. The passer-by provided first aid, the ambulance service and emergency doctor then fought for the life of the man. All efforts and resuscitation measures were ultimately unsuccessful.

    The autopsy revealed a previous illness in the man, to which the terrible event can be attributed. The 38-year-old was probably already dead when he hit the floor. "It all points to a so-called second death," said the police spokesman.

    The grief is great in Geisenbrunn. The 38-year-old came from the village and was popular with many. "We will miss you", friends and acquaintances wrote on mourning cards and laid down on the maypole. It is written on a candle: "I will never forget you." The deceased leaves his wife, who was looked after by the crisis intervention team on Monday

    Monday, April 13th:

Geisenbrunn - He just wanted to get some fresh air: A 38-year-old man from the Geisenbrunn district of Gilching suddenly died on Easter Monday . This is reported by the police headquarters in Upper Bavaria North.

Geisenbrunn: man dies on a walk - criminal investigation determined

Accordingly, the man had left his apartment for a walk . Around the same time, another resident went to the cigarette machine . At around 1.50 a.m. he found the 38-year-old lying lifeless and covered in blood on the main street in Geisenbrunn near the maypole. "The witness provided first aid until the emergency doctor arrived," police spokesman Hans-Peter Kammerer reported. But despite all efforts and resuscitation measures , the 38-year-old died on the spot shortly afterwards. A crisis intervention team looked after his wife during the night.

Man covered in blood and lifeless on the street: background unclear

"So far there are no indications of a traffic accident or any other third party fault ," emphasized Kammerer. Alcohol also doesn't matter, he said on request. "So far, it has been assumed that a fall will take place." The police department has suggested that the man's body be autopsied. The prosecutor's decision will be made later this Tuesday.

---

A terrible family drama has occurred in the Rosenheim district. A mother must have killed her two daughters - the woman is a federal police officer.

Deadly family dispute in Augsburg. A 15-year-old was killed. The police were able to arrest a suspect.

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2020-04-14

Similar news:

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.