The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Mysterious confession in the summit book: the police check eerie lines - then the case takes a turn

2020-09-11T21:16:53.653Z


Was there a crime? There are lines that disturb. An entry in a summit book puzzles the police in Tyrol. Now there is a turning point.


Was there a crime?

There are lines that disturb.

An entry in a summit book puzzles the police in Tyrol.

Now there is a turning point.

  • The police in Tyrol deal with an entry in a summit book.

  • Somebody left unusual lines on the Hüttenspitze in Halltal near Absam (Austria).

  • Is there actually a crime behind this?

    Now the public prosecutor is dealing with it.

Update from September 9th

: The State Criminal Police Office had to deal with an entry in the summit book.

A hiker had read strange lines in the summit book on the Hüttenspitze in the Karwendel Mountains in Austria and filed a report with the police in Tyrol.

A stranger had written a sentence that could indicate a crime (see first report below).

The wording that “

a serious crime

was

involuntarily committed”

could mean a lot, the police had to investigate.

The authorities launched a call for witnesses and asked the author to come forward.

After this call, the author of the mysterious entry in the summit book has now reported.

Apparently his guilty conscience bothered him too much.

A 26-year-old Austrian contacted the State Criminal Police Office in Tyrol on Tuesday.

He wrote the entry in the summit, said the young man.

According to the current state of the investigation, the police assume that the 26-year-old acted “out of rash”.

He denied the commission of a crime.

The Innsbruck public prosecutor's office will now judge the matter under criminal law.

Mysterious confession in the summit book: Police check eerie lines - and look for the "mountain boys"

First report from September 8, 2020

Halltal - It sounds completely bizarre.

Has anyone relieved their conscience and actually made a confession at an altitude of 1,860 meters?

An entry in the summit book on the Hüttenspitze near Absam (Austria) puzzles the State Criminal Police Office in Tyrol.

In an entry from August 23, there is

talk

of a

serious crime

that was

committed

unintentionally

”.

The police in Tyrol are now concerned with these lines.

A hiker had read and reported this entry.

Has a crime been committed - or is there nothing in the words at all?

"We have to determine, we cannot rule out that it is a joke," says police spokesman Bernhard Gruber when asked to Ippen-Digital-Zentralredaktion-Süd.

He is personally not aware of any case of this type.

Absam / Austria: After entry in the summit book - police are looking for hiking group "Mountainboys"

The author and the author are unknown "to date," said the police.

At first it is not clear from the communication which crime is involved.

For tactical reasons, the police are silent on further details, said the Tyrolean police spokesman.

The investigators are concerned with the question of whether there is anything to the confession.

Whether there is actually a criminal offense must be verified.

The author is asked to report to the police.

In addition, the investigators are looking for possible witnesses who can provide information or have observed something.

On this day in August, a group of hikers

entered the summit book

under the name “

Mountainboys

(ml)

.

Check out this post on Instagram

A post shared by Harald Holzhammer (@harald_holzhammer) on Aug 8, 2017 at 6:31 am PDT

During the descent, a German had a fatal * accident on a mountain tour.

The man from North Rhine-Westphalia fell 100 meters over a steep rock face.

His wife and daughter had to watch everything.

Despite warnings, a woman in shorts ventured onto an Alpine glacier - a fall followed.

A “miracle rescue” followed after 48 hours.

* Merkur.de is part of the Ippen-Digital network

List of rubric lists: © GoogleMaps Screenshot

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2020-09-11

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.