As of: February 1, 2024, 6:30 a.m
By: Rudi Stallein
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Again and again a Lenggrieser gets carried away into stupid things and ends up in front of the judge.
© Uli Deck
A Lenggrieser (18) is always tempted to do stupid things.
Because he showed his classmates the Hitler salute, he ended up in court.
Lenggries/Wolfratshausen – He’s not a bad guy.
At least that's the impression that juvenile judge Friederike Kirschstein-Freund has of the defendant, and that's what she's trying to convey to him.
Every time the young Lenggrieser sits opposite her again.
But the 18-year-old is obviously not that good at thinking.
That's why he occasionally allows himself to be carried away into something stupid that then gets him into criminal proceedings.
Now for the third time.
Showed Hitler salute to ten classmates
On June 22nd last year, according to the very brief indictment, the trainee showed the Hitler salute in front of ten classmates at the vocational school.
Therefore, he had to answer before the youth court at the Wolfratshausen district court for using the symbols of unconstitutional organizations.
The proceedings were temporarily discontinued against payment of 450 euros.
The defendant showed understanding in court.
“Yes, that was shit, I’m aware of that,” explained the 18-year-old.
“I don’t think that’s good either.” The judge asked why he did it anyway.
“Someone said, make the salute,” she got in response.
“So I did that.”
“I have nothing to do with right-wing radicals,” writes the defendant
The judge probed further: “What’s the point in that?” The question was aimed at another addition in the indictment that was, however, not criminally relevant.
While he held one arm up in the Hitler salute, the young man from Lenggries held an “Intersex-Inclusive Pride Flag” in his other hand – a rainbow flag with a symbol for intersex.
“All together it makes no sense at all,” the judge said, underlining her incomprehension.
The young man in the dock had commented on his behavior in a letter to the court long before the trial.
In it he asserted: “I am a normal citizen, I have nothing to do with right-wing radicals.” He had behaved badly and something like that would not happen to him again.
“The letter shows that he is thinking about it,” concluded juvenile court assistant Lena Wahner.
“I think he has distanced himself from things like that.”
Proceedings will be discontinued upon payment of 450 euros
Judge Kirschstein-Freund saw it similarly, which is why she asked the representative of the public prosecutor's office whether a judgment was needed in this matter.
“The whole thing is so meaningless that you probably didn’t think about it,” she said, summarizing her impressions to the defendant.
Everyone involved agreed with their suggestion that the procedure be subject to payment of a fine of 450 euros.
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The judge told the young man (with an almost pleading tone): “Think for a moment before you do anything.
That would be good."