2 sentenced in brutal Germany subway attack

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2 sentenced in brutal Germany subway attack

Retired teacher pummeled after asking men to respect ban on smoking


MUNICH, Germany - A Turkish man and a Greek youth were convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to prison Tuesday for a brutal attack on a German retiree that sparked a political furor over crime committed by young immigrants.

The Munich state court sentenced Serkan Aksu, 21, to 12 years in prison. It gave 18-year-old Spyridon Loukas an 8 1/2-year sentence — imposed under juvenile law, because he was 17 at the time of the December attack.

Surveillance cameras in a Munich subway station captured footage of the pair beating and kicking the 76-year-old retired teacher after he asked them to respect a ban on smoking.

'Cold-blooded'
Judge Reinhold Baier told the court their attack was "cold-blooded and merciless" and described it as a "completely senseless act." He said the victim, who suffered a triple skull fracture, was lucky to have survived.

Lawyers for the defendants had argued that they should be convicted only of bodily harm and given lower sentences. They said that they would appeal the verdict.

A top Bavarian official said before Tuesday's verdict that the assailants should be thrown out of Germany once their sentences are served.

"No one would understand it if foreigners who show such brutality were able to continue staying in Germany," the state's conservative interior minister, Joachim Herrmann, said on Monday.

Notorious case
The attack gained national notoriety and helped make youth crime the centerpiece of an acrimonious election campaign in neighboring Hesse state in January.

Conservative Gov. Roland Koch declared that "we have too many criminal young foreigners" and argued that "zero tolerance against violence" must be an important part of integration policy.

Opponents accused him of stoking prejudices for short-term political gain, and the issue appeared to backfire when Koch's party suffered large losses in the election.

2 sentenced in Germany subway attack - Europe - MSNBC.com
 
Subway Attackers Sent to Jail, Could Face Deportation

Subway Attackers Sent to Jail, Could Face Deportation

Two young men were given long jail terms for beating an elderly man in a subway. The case triggered a bitter debate in Germany about whether ethnic minorities should be blamed for increasing juvenile violence.

A 21-year-old Turkish national will spend 12 years in jail while his 18-year-old Greek national accomplice will go to jail for 8.5 years. The defense council had wanted to two young men to be convicted for assault, which would have carried a two-year jail term.

The court called the attack, which occurred just before Christmas in 2007, a "completely meaningless act."

The men, who grew up in Germany, were convicted of attempted murder in the attack on a 76-year-old former teacher. The attack was filmed by the Munich subway's closed-circuit TV cameras.

The retired teacher had reportedly rebuked the two young men for smoking in a non-smoking zone. The men responded by knocking him to the ground and kicking him in the head. The man was seriously injured with a triple fracture to the skull and internal bleeding, but survived.

Men offer apologies, excuses


Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Surveillance footage captured the brutal attack
The accused, 17 and 20 at the time of the attack, were convicted by a youth court in Munich. The younger man will serve his term in a youth detention facility while the older man will go to jail.

Serkan A., 21, said he was high on heroin and alcohol at the time. The 17-year-old Spyridon L. said he was drunk.

Both men admitted to the attack and apologized to the victim in court.

"To this day I cannot say why I did something like that," Serkan A. said in a statement read in court by his lawyer. "I had no intention of killing him."

"I am ashamed," Spyridon L. said. "I am not normally the kind of person who hits old people. I was so drunk, I am sorry."

Case quicly turned political

The victim said he did not regard the apologies as sincere, remarking that the young men "played soccer with my head."

The assault became a political weapon in the hands of Roland Koch, premier of the neighboring state of Hesse. Koch spoke out against what he saw as the courts' reluctance to jail teen troublemakers for minor violence.

In his re-election campaign, Koch and other center-right figures called for special youth jails, or boot camps, which would focus on arduous exercise and military-style discipline.

Koch's campaign drew attacks from opposition parties, who accused him of exploiting anti-immigrant sentiment for political gain. His conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) lost the January poll.

Calls for deportation


Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: Koch wants to toughen laws against juvenile offenders
Throughout January, the German news media highlighted cases of violence by minority youths amid calls for deportation of offenders, but the controversy has since calmed.

Bavarian conservatives have called for a change in laws to maeke it easier to deport convicted criminals. Bavaria's Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann said he would like to see the two men sent back to their parents' countries when they complete their jail terms.

"No one could understand how foreigners who would display such a brutality could to be allowed to stay in Germany," Herrmann told the Bild newspaper.


Subway Attackers Sent to Jail, Could Face Deportation | Germany | Deutsche Welle | 08.07.2008



It was happened last year. We thought the law would deport them to their own countries due their passports. We saw the TV news yesterday and cannot understand their decision for send them to jail instead of deport them to their country... Oh well

 
Jeez... people are developing shorter tempers nowadays! :roll:
 
I think it would be better to deport them AFTER they finish their prison sentence in Germany.
 
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