Shooting in Munich Shopping Center - Page 31
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Broetchenholer
Germany1821 Posts
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SK.Testie
Canada11084 Posts
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ahswtini
Northern Ireland22201 Posts
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zatic
Zurich15234 Posts
Why post this? It's 2 days old and turned out false. Everyone: If you want to discuss other events from this week: Make a thread. This here is about the Munich shooting. | ||
SK.Testie
Canada11084 Posts
On July 26 2016 00:38 zatic wrote: Why post this? It's 2 days old and turned out false. Everyone: If you want to discuss other events from this week: Make a thread. This here is about the Munich shooting. Well technically we should have a thread similar to the gun thread at this rate. If you're seeing this topic then another attack in Europe has happened and people disagree on what to do. | ||
m4ini
4215 Posts
On July 26 2016 00:28 SK.Testie wrote: The man in Reutlingen attacked her with a machete of all things, and attacked other people as well. Considering he was stopped by another car I don't think it was a relationship. My theory is that he admired her and was sad that she rebuffed his advances. He then let his wounded pride take him too far. Wasn't a machete, but a "Dönermesser". Kebabknife, i guess. edit Why post this? It's 2 days old and turned out false. What did? Looking at this, it seems to be accurate, although i just skimmed it. | ||
D_lux
Hungary60 Posts
On July 26 2016 01:13 SK.Testie wrote: Well technically we should have a thread similar to the gun thread at this rate. Okay, sorry, I didn't know it was proved false and I didn't know what to think about it. I assume the allahu part was proved false. | ||
Clonester
Germany2808 Posts
A attacker in Japan killed atleast 15 people and injured 45 more in a home for disabled people with a knife. | ||
SK.Testie
Canada11084 Posts
On July 26 2016 08:38 Clonester wrote: I dont want to derail this thread that hard, but after 10 pages have been about how these attacks are connected to multi-culturalism and how monocultured states are much saver from them... A attacker in Japan killed atleast 15 people and injured 45 more in a home for disabled people with a knife. Yes. But it's a lot rarer in Japan isn't it. A lot rarer. This was one rando attacker that Japan might have every few years. You had 4 people pop-off and go haywire this week. Never forget, they actually downplayed the sexual assaults in Cologne. (This happened all over your country btw). The sweetest part about it is that liberals think the best way to deal with it is to hide the information from the public, downplay the events, and never let them know how bad it is. Because kicking the can down the road is a great idea. w/e, you guys will handle it fine I'm sure. Just enjoy your 100% chance of increased crime rates and lowered social cohesion. + Show Spoiler + All of the incidents involved women being surrounded and assaulted by groups of men on the street.[23][24] There are more than 1,900 victims – 1,200 of whom were sexually assaulted – and police stated that at least 2,000 men were involved, acting in groups.[25] Police reported that the perpetrators were men of "Arab or North African appearance" and said that Germany had never experienced such mass sexual assaults before.[24][26][27][28][29] The attacks sparked an international outcry, a debate about women's rights, the sustainability of Germany's asylum policy, and social differences between European societies and those of North Africa and the Middle East. Taking place during the European migrant crisis (see timeline), the attacks also led to a hardening of attitudes against mass immigration.[30] In Düsseldorf, nine persons were named as suspects, eight of whom are migrants.[85] According to a media report, an 18-year-old woman from Mönchengladbach recognized a perpetrator in a report of Spiegel TV and decided to make a complaint to the police afterwards. The 33-year-old man, who is suspected to have sexually offended the woman in Düsseldorf out of a group, was arrested by investigators.[33] In Dortmund, nine further people were put under suspicion, seven of them migrants.[85] In Bielefeld, four migrants from Morocco and Algeria were identified as suspects.[85] By 20 January, the North Rhine-Westphalia Police, responsible for Bielefeld, Cologne, Dortmund, and Düsseldorf, reported that 52 people were being treated as suspects; a majority of them were of non-German origin.[18] Eight people were named as suspects in Hamburg, all of them migrants and some of them refugees.[16] On 20 January, Hamburg police published photos of two wanted persons who are suspected to have sexually assaulted an 18-year-old girl in the early morning hours of 1 January on the street of Große Freiheit,[77] which led to the arrest of a 29-year-old male migrant from Afghanistan on 21 January. He was recognised by a security guard of a refugee reception center in Hamburg. A second suspected migrant was freed shortly after his arrest due to a lack of adequate suspicion.[78] On 26 January, Hamburg police published another photo of a wanted person, who is suspected to have sexually assaulted two 20-year-old women on New Year's Eve while acting as part of a group.[119] On 5 February, a 33-year-old man from Iran was reported to have been arrested in a refugee reception center in Hamburg and taken into investigative custody under suspicion of assaulting the two women in Hamburg.[120][121] On 4 February, Hamburg police released photos of two further suspects. The nationwide TV series Aktenzeichen XY … ungelöst was used for the manhunt for the Hamburg perpetrators.[3] In Stuttgart, a 20-year-old asylum seeker from Iraq was detained for sexually assaulting two girls while acting out of a group.[84] In Frankfurt, the police is investigating ten men in the ages of 15 to 27, all asylum seekers or refugees, who were temporarily arrested for pickpocketing on New Year's Eve near the bridge of Eiserner Steg. They are trying to determine if these men were involved in the sexual assaults. One of the suspects is in investigative custody.[83] Reinhard Merkel, a law professor from Hamburg, said that convicting the suspects, especially for sexual offences, will be difficult because an unequivocal identification by the victims is needed, which is often not the case. Furthermore, policemen stated that the video footage of the cameras within and outside the Cologne main station is partly unusable.[122] | ||
zatic
Zurich15234 Posts
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zatic
Zurich15234 Posts
After the shooting in the mall, the attacker went into the parking garage of the mall, where he fired 17 rounds into a parked car. He then proceeded to the parking deck, where the shouting match with the guy from the window cell phone video occured. Police on the ground level spotted him on the parking deck and shot at him, but missed. He then fled the parking deck and went through a small park and into a residential building. At this point he had put away his gun and actually met and talked to several people he randomly met on the staircase in the residential building. The people had no idea who he was and one person actually offered him help. Police: There could have been more victims, but apparently he was done killing people. He then hid for about 2 hours in the basement of the building while the search was going on. After that he emerged from the basement, and immediately encountered police. That's when he shot himself. Also, the police arrested a couple suspected of illegally selling the hand gun to the attacker. Police posed as potential buyers on dark net and arrested the man and woman at the exchange. The man apparently said during the buying process that he had been the one who sold the Munich attacker his gun. | ||
WhiteDog
France8650 Posts
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zatic
Zurich15234 Posts
However, the suicide was definitely part of the plan, seeing how obsessed he was with previous (school) shootings and the usual school shooting play book. | ||
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