Jan Böhmermann address illegally retrieved from police computer



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The police data scandal is spreading. According to a media report, Jan Böhmermann’s address was illegally retrieved from a computer, a few days before a threatening letter from “NSU 2.0”.

In the course of threatening letters from “NSU 2.0”, a police computer illegally accessed the Berlin address and the personal data of the moderator Jan Böhmermann. The “Frankfurter Rundschau” reports on this. According to the newspaper, a threatening letter from “NSU 2.0” appeared a few days later, addressed to Böhmermann’s private address.

The Hessian Justice Minister Eva Kühne-Hörmann (CDU) confirmed the case in the interior committee of the Hessian state parliament. According to “FR”, Böhmermann’s personal data was requested from the police computer on July 25, 2020, and the case became part of the investigation in relation to the far-right threat letters signed with “NSU 2.0 “.

The letter was emailed on August 1, but to a different address. But Böhmermann’s address was in the email, reports the “Frankfurter Rundschau.”

25 preliminary proceedings against 50 suspects

But Böhmermann is not an isolated case. In the investigation of far-right conversations by police officers and threatening emails with the sender “NSU 2.0”, there are now 25 procedures, according to Hessian Justice Minister Kühne-Hörmann. These were directed against 50 defendants, said the CDU politician in the interior committee. Interior Minister Peter Beuth (CDU) reported 105 threatening letters, 88 of which are part of the “NSU 2.0” complex.

Several politicians and the lawyer from Frankfurt Seda Basay-Yildiz, who represented the families of the victims in the Munich trial for the murders of the “National Socialist Underground” (NSU), received the threatening letters, among other things. For some, personal data had previously been accessed from police computers in Frankfurt and Wiesbaden.

Also in Berlin and Hamburg, illegal data queries from police computers are said to have been made in connection with far-right threats. The opposition of the Wiesbaden state parliament accused the Hesse investigators of setbacks and late investigations.

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