Judgment in the murder process: Ex-partner kills women with 20 knife stings!

Judgment in the murder process: Ex-partner kills women with 20 knife stings!

In the Verden district court, the judgment is expected in a murder process, which has touched the public in various ways. The Plädoyers and the final decision of the court are coming up on Tuesday at 9:15 a.m. The accused is accused of having killed his ex-partner with 20 knife stings.

Tragic history will take place in Bad Fallingbostel in the Heidekreis in August 2022. According to the indictment, the man, a Bulgarian, was waiting in front of his former companion's apartment. With a knife whose blade had a length of 14 centimeters and was attached to his hand with adhesive tape, he stabbed when the woman returned from a meeting with her new friend with her son. The public prosecutor reports about 20 knife stings that the woman immediately cost life.

The course of the procedure

In the first trial, the accused was sentenced to a ten -year and six months' prison sentence, with the court guilty of him for manslaughter. However, the revision of the co -action led to a re -evaluation of the evidence. The Federal Court of Justice opened the original judgment in spring, since the court had made mistakes when evaluating the murder feature.

Now the Verden district court has the task of negotiating the case again. The new allegations and the circumstances that led to the deadly incident are critically examined, and there is the possibility that the accused will be convicted of murder this time, which could confront him with a life penalty.

The events related to the murder process are of great importance, since they not only affect the legal handling of violent crimes, but also cheer on the social debate on the subject of domestic violence and its fatal consequences. The public has shaken the increasing number of such tragic incidents and raises questions about the protection of vulnerable people.

On Tuesday, the final decision of the court is expected, and it remains to be seen how the judges rate the complex evidence and the previous judgments. The assessment of the deed as a murder, possibly due to insidies, could mean that an even harder course is taken against such violent crimes.

For more information about the developments in the field of criminal judiciary and this specific murder process, see the current report www.sat1regional.de .