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The rejection in the love siege of then 37 years Spyrou who died in a hospital in Athens brought his cold execution Carnation inside his car with eight bullets, as he left for his home returning to his family.
Plettenberg was never famous for its sunny days. It is a typical German town in your state. North Rhine-Westphalia that in 1989 it had about 15,000 inhabitants and some Greek immigrants, who lived and worked there.
Among them is o Spyridon K., a 38-year-old compatriot at the time, a “guest worker” in Germany protagonist and author of a murder that shocked the quiet German city.
A murder involving a young woman, of Greek origin, who lived happily married in Plettenberg, with her husband and young children.
Spyros’s love, as his friends and acquaintances called him for Garyfallia Alexiou, initially led him to the “siege” of the young woman through his friendly acquaintance and intense flirting.
Except that the flirtation of the Greek immigrant never found an answer for the 25-year-old, who politely rejected his proposals to get closer.
Something that Spyros or Spyridon K. did not like at all, who armed his affected ego with a revolver and imposed a death sentence on the young Greek.
The diary was written on April 6, 1989, when Garyfallia was shot almost by contact by a Greek man he knew while preparing to pull out of a parking lot in a town nine kilometers from Plettenberg.
His murderer literally disappeared from the face of the earth the same day, his traces disappeared, and German police investigations led nowhere.
Thirty-one years later, the epileptic seizure of a 68-year-old man in Amfilochia was the occasion to investigate the murder of the unfortunate woman, until the end of last April. it remained a crime with impunity.
The execution
The village of Dingeringhausse is a quiet place 40 kilometers from Plettenberg, ideal for walks in spring.
They decided to go there on Friday, April 6, 1989, Garyfallia Alexiou -her father’s last name- and her Greek friend, but not to relax or say so.
The young woman had to meet Spyros K.
The latter had asked him to meet for the last time. I wanted to tell her a few things, but the girl from Brussels, Filiates, didn’t want to go alone and she had every reason to.
Spyros K. awaited them determined by everything, but above all “blurred” by the rejection of his love for the young woman.
As a friend of the latter’s husband, he had the comfort of frequenting the couple’s residence and quickly fell in love with his friend’s wife.
Being a passionate man according to the German media, Spyros had occupied the Police, when he injured his son-in-law in 1984, because he caught him having coffee with his wife.
Sick with jealousy, he stabbed him 24 times with scissors, a story the Plettenberg Greeks knew, and for a time sent the perpetrator to prison.
As it turned out in the years that followed, when he was released and returned to what we might call normalcy, it didn’t last long.
Knowing his friend’s wife generated expectations and unanswered passion, which was enough to bring his other self to the surface.
Garyfallia, who had kindly clarified to her a few days ago that she was happy with her husband and the two girls they had after their marriage, was afraid of meeting him alone.
That is why she took her friend with her, so that she feels that she is not alone with Spyros, that she has a man of her own with her, in case the latter loses his temper.
Except Spyros wasn’t right. He was angry, furious and blinded by the passion he felt for his friend’s wife, who had to pay dearly for his refusal to surrender.
When they met, her friend walked away to let them talk, without imagining what would follow in a few minutes, of what seems to last an eternity.
To this day, no one knows what Spyros and Garyfallia said, but the last word belonged to the Greek immigrant.
To be precise, it was not a word, it was bullets, six in all, that left his pistol and were stuck in Carnation’s body, two in his head and four in his chest.
Her friend ran, mad with anxiety and found the young woman dead, in the driver’s seat, with her foot on the accelerator of the car, an Opel Kadett, and her murderer missing.
The chronicle of the great flight
The police Wilfried booker She was one of the first to arrive at the scene of the crime and the one who promised to solve her case. horrible murder.
A murder that left two girls orphans, an inconsolable husband and the young woman’s parents mourning the loss of their daughter.
His funeral takes place in Brussels a few days later, as German police search everywhere for the now wanted Spyros K., but the latter is already far away.
Immediately after the crime, the killer exits the parking lot at breakneck speed in a red Mercedes and stops only for gas.
He knows that if he manages to cross the border it will be very difficult to locate him, so he drives about 700 kilometers to the town of Kieffersfelden.
From there it enters Austria through the city of Tirol and arrives by road to Bari, where he embarks on a ship to Greece.
The route of the great flight ends in Amfilochia, where he permanently settles, stating that he is an immigrant from Australia, essentially starting a new life, 2,500 kilometers from Plettenberg.
Where Wilfried Booker does everything possible to solve the murder of Garyfallia, reaching the case even on German television, through the ZDF channel.
The unfortunate Garyfallia’s brother, who spoke to a German newspaper, praised the German detective’s work, saying: “The police and Mr. Booker supported us from the first moment and did everything possible to find the killer.”
A murderer now living a new life in Greece, until four months ago, when a seizure was the reason for his arrest, thirty-one years after his crime.
The Germans were still looking for him
Unlike in Greece, where after 25 years crimes are prescribed by law in Germany, this is not the case and the file for the murder of Garyfallia was always open.
On April 29, Spyros K., a 68-year-old man, suffered an attack and a neighbor notified the police and the EKAB.
The man was taken first to the Amfilochia Health Center and then to the Agrinio Hospital, after hitting his head during his fall.
A few hours later, the police officers who typed his name were surprised to see that there was an international arrest warrant for Spyros K. issued by the German authorities.
The latter were immediately informed of this unexpected event, immediately notified Garyfallia’s relatives and immediately began extradition procedures for the now arrested Greek fugitive.
Grigoris Alexiou, the unfortunate woman’s brother, probably fell from the clouds, when he learned of the events in Greece about her murder with six bullets.
The memories reawakened, thirty-one years later for everyone.
For Garyfallia’s husband and two daughters, with whom he stayed for a few years in Greece, before returning to Stuttgart, where he now lives.
His brother-in-law was the one who informed him of the arrest of Spyros K. and his imminent extradition to Germany, to stand trial.
Shortly after, Alexiou called retired police officer Wilfried Booker, 73, to learn the news.
“Such a development, just satisfied makes you feel,” he said on a German website, adding: “I and all of us who dealt with the case feel good that it has cleared up even after so many years.”
As for the detainee, his extradition was never carried out after his death in a hospital in Athens where he was recently treated.
Initially, the hematoma he had on his head in combination with the major respiratory problems, he was taken intubated to the Treatment Unit Unit of the Agrinio Hospital.
When his condition improved significantly, he was transferred to the Korydallos prison hospital last June. but a few days ago he died and was buried in his particular homeland of Preveza.
Fate wanted Spyros K. not to return to Germany, which he left three decades ago to escape the consequences of his act, after having killed a 25-year-old woman who rejected him.
Something that was enough for him to kill her.
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