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Frankfurt: Trial of alleged Salafist trio

  • fromStefan Behr

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Three suspected Salafists have had to answer to the regional court in Frankfurt on Thursday. The process could end in a deal.

  • Three men are in Frankfurt in court. The reproach: Terrorist financing.
  • The men from Wiesbaden and Offenbach are Salafists.
  • The Salafist trial in Frankfurt could end up with a deal.

Frankfurt – In the second attempt, two 32-year-old twin brothers have had to make friends since Thursday Wiesbaden and a 22 year old Offenbacher because of Terrorist financing responsible for the district court.

They are accused of having misused 1,600 euros from the job center to buy a machine gun. They also planned to rent a car to drive into a crowd, to ambush and murder police officers and to take away their weapons to kill other “unbelievers”.

Terrorism trial in Frankfurt: Suspected Salafists can hope for a deal

The process had already started in March, but had been canceled shortly afterwards due to an illness of the presiding judge. At that time, all three of the accused were still in custody, one of the two brothers is now at large. Right from the start, the board made it clear that it would not join a deal.

In the event of a confession, she could stand up for the Offenbacher Samir S. and the Wiesbadener Sebastian Sh. present a prison sentence between two years and eight months and three and a half years, whose twin brother Benjamin Sh. could face a suspended sentence. The defense wants to think about that again.

Trial in Frankfurt: the accused trio does not provide any information

And therefore the three did not provide any information as in the first process start. In return, the twins chatted a little about their youth, and at least that was surprisingly original. Very few would have guessed that Sebastian Sh. According to their own statements in a village in the district of Mainz / Bingen, “a Christian upbringing” and even “went through communion” and even “went to church every Sunday”.

At some point, however, the neighbors, for some unknown reason, would have demanded that the Sh.s fighting dog disappear, and there he, his parents and his five siblings had disappeared, to an area where the fighting dog feared humans and not the other way around: the Hunsrück.

The teachers had separated him and his brother Benjamin early on so that they did not go crazy – the teachers, not the brothers. The two would then have finished secondary school separately and made a career: he as a warehouse worker until his back ached (after four years), his brother as a cage cleaning specialist at the Max Planck Institute.

Process in Frankfurt: “I am a funny person”

It could have been different. Sebastian Sh. According to his own statements, he had managed the second largest thing a footballer could dream of: At 18, he played for Kickers Offenbach’s second team, but was thrown out there octagonally because he ignored the obligation to be present at the Christmas party. He preferred to cuddle with his girlfriend and sent his twin brother to the party. Unfortunately, that was exposed.

“I’m a funny person,” says Benjamin Sh. about himself, and there seems to be something about it: his wife has only been pregnant for a second time since being out of prison a few days ago. The chamber is not astonished and congratulates.

The process continues.

By Stefan Behr

At the regional court in Frankfurt, the trial of three young men ends in long prison terms. They had thrown a 24-year-old into the Main.

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