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Ten punches in the face and lots of resistance

2024-03-02T10:15:57.602Z

Highlights: Ten punches in the face and lots of resistance. A then 20-year-old freaked out under the influence of drugs in the Forsterner Maibaumstüberl. The judge sent him into permanent arrest for two weeks. As of: March 2, 2024, 11:00 a.m By: Mayls Majurani CommentsPressSplit: How should you not behave at a company outing? A prime example of this was now sitting as a defendant before the Erdinger district court.



As of: March 2, 2024, 11:00 a.m

By: Mayls Majurani

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Press

Split

A then 20-year-old freaked out under the influence of drugs in the Forsterner Maibaumstüberl.

The judge sent him into permanent arrest for two weeks (symbolic photo).

© IMAGO / STPP

A then 20-year-old freaked out under the influence of drugs in the Forsterner Maibaumstüberl.

The judge sent him into permanent arrest for two weeks.

Erding/Forstern – How should you not behave at a company outing?

A prime example of this was now sitting as a defendant before the Erdinger district court.

The then 20-year-old trainee from the northern district of Ebersberg was at the company and family day in the Maibaumstüberl in Forstern in 2023.

There late in the evening he hit a man he didn't know in the face with his fist at least ten times for no reason.

He also slightly injured another person, fought against the police who tried to take him into custody, and insulted everyone around him in the worst possible way.

Judge Michael Lefkaditis sentenced the man to two weeks of permanent detention under juvenile criminal law.

The now 21-year-old has no memories of the crime, but he does not doubt the accuracy of the many witness statements.

And there were a few: Seven witnesses testified in court, another two were disinvited at short notice.

Defense attorney Markus Fischer informed the court in good time that his client would make a full confession.

What happened?

The witnesses unanimously reported that the young man in the Forstern fire department's maypole tent was drunk and very aggressive.

First he bumped into a Forsterner he didn't know (“It wasn't a mistake”).

But he noticed the alcohol level and didn't argue with him, but instead continued walking.

But he kept an eye on the bumper.

The defendant then deliberately collided with the next Forsterner.

He didn't want to pay any attention to him either and kept walking.

But the defendant turned around and attacked him out of nowhere.

“It wasn’t just alcohol involved,” said the victim, who received ten to fifteen blows to the face within a very short space of time.

And in fact: two later blood samples revealed 2.09 per mille of residual alcohol as well as breakdown products from cannabis and cocaine.

However, the defendant never consumed the latter.

“Maybe something was thrown into his drink,” his defense attorney speculated.

When the firefighters who had set up the bar got wind of the whole thing, they intervened and took the bat with them to the parking lot.

“He had developed incredible strength and anger,” said one of the firefighters.

In front of the tent they banned him from entering the house.

Finally it was family day, “there were 20, 25 children there”.

The hooligan didn't like that at all, he continued to thrash around, hit a firefighter in the neck and was finally pinned to the ground until the police came.

But even on the ground and later in the patrol car and in the hospital, he was difficult to control, screaming “the full program,” as one witness said: “Sons of bitches,” “lick me,” “bull pigs,” and more.

But the young man was sane - he remembered one of the police officers from another investigation.

After all, the situation was visibly unpleasant for the defendant in court: “I don’t know what got into me.

I can't explain it." He apologized to everyone involved individually, and gave the injured parties compensation as compensation for the perpetrator and victim.

After the incident, he sought addiction counseling on his own to get his alcohol consumption under control.

According to his own statement, he hasn't drunk anything since then.

And it should stay that way: In addition to the arrest, Judge Lefkaditis required him to prove his abstinence for one year: “It is clear to me that the legislature will legalize cannabis.

You will still not use drugs or alcohol for a year.”

Incidentally, the man completed his training shortly after the incident, but did not return to the company.

He now works for another company in the same area.

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-03-02

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