Stade, Germany - The gruesome murders of seven people
working at a Chinese restaurant were triggered off by a cook fleeing
the scene, according to the police case which was unfolded Tuesday in
a German court.
Five Vietnamese immigrants to Germany are accused of one of the
bloodiest armed robberies in Germany in half a century.
The indictment said the masked robbers had only made up their
minds a day earlier to hold up the restaurant late on February 4 in
the country town of Sittensen, near Hamburg, and had not intended to
kill anyone.
However the restaurant cook tried to escape and one of the robbers
shot him dead, then the restaurant owner. The other five were shot in
the head in cold blood so there would be no witnesses left to those
two murders.
It was possible the raiders had not noticed the cook was present
when they rounded up the staff.
Five staff from Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Hong Kong were
killed along with popular local restaurant owner Danny Wing Hong Fan,
32, and his 28-year-old wife, both British citizens.
At the trial's second hearing, prosecutors made public for the
first time how the victims were tortured, saying the robbers bashed
the owner with a piece of wood and choked his wife. Most victims were
bound with cable-ties.
One of the victims was reportedly still alive when police arrived
but succumbed soon after to his injuries. Only the owners' baby
daughter survived the attack.
None of the accused, who are aged 30 to 42, has personally
admitted to the killings, but police say the trigger was pulled by
the 30-year-old accused who had a pistol with a silencer.
The three alleged to have actually raided the building are charged
with murder and the other two alleged plotters are accused of robbery
and incitement to robbery.
The first hearing last month had been taken up with objections by
the 10 defence lawyers, who maintained that key papers were served
too late and the judges were biased. The court in the town of Stade
overruled them.
In new challenges Tuesday, the defence demanded the replacement of
the interpreters appointed by the court to help the accused, because
they did not speak the defendants' own dialect.
They also alleged one interpreter was biased because he had
previously worked for detectives on the case. The defence lawyers
added they themselves needed more time to read the 40,638 pages of
files on the case.
To bolster its case, the prosecution is to bring forensic
scientific evidence gathered at the scene of the crime. A verdict is
not expected until next year.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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