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It is an incredible act! On Wednesday, shortly after 12 noon, a young man († 22) entered an apartment on Speicherstrasse in St. Gallen. He attacks an Italian woman († 46) and hits her with a blunt-edged object. He will not stop before her, even when the police raid the apartment and want to catch him. That’s why they shoot the man, he dies on the spot.
The woman is seriously injured and taken to hospital. Traumatic brain injury. Later she succumbs to her injuries. Particularly puzzling: Both the apartment and victim selection appear to be “completely random” at this point, as stated in the statement from the St. Gallen prosecutor yesterday. What had happened to the young man?
Post a photo hours before the crime
VIEW research shows: The crazy killer is Steve P *. of St. Gallen. Until 2018 it was registered at an address that is located about 500 meters from the crime scene.
Just a few hours before leaving with the Italian, he uploads a photo of himself to his Facebook profile. He shows scratches and bruises on his face, and he looks crazy.
He also posts an image with the lyrics “Black Lives Matter”. And she is bothered by police violence in the United States. Is it a coincidence that he was later shot dead by a police officer due to his attack on the woman, or even deliberately?
There are indications that the alleged perpetrator had psychological problems, says Regula Stöckli, spokesperson for the St. Gallen prosecutor. Proof of this is “the extremely brutal procedure”.
“I tell you it’s a dirty life”
A song that he apparently sang himself on August 18 and uploaded to Facebook gives insight into the young man’s broken inner life: “I’m telling you it’s a dirty life, a shitty life”he raps on it. And then he incoherently praises the foreigners who have brought so much good culture to Switzerland. To later announce that he is converting to Islam. You can also guess an announcement of a murder: “I tell you, I come with a gun and kill everyone (…) As I am a proud Muslim, I defend blacks, Arabs and Turks and all those with brown skin.”
Process open against cops
The circumstances of the act, as well as the motive, are now the subject of further investigation. The process is opened against the two policemen who fired the shots.
The officers involved were treated after the firearms were used, Roman Kohler, a spokesman for the St. Gallen city police, said on request. Both an internal reference group and external psychologists were summoned. The two policemen are not on duty for their own protection. “You don’t process an event like this in one day,” says Kohler.
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