Rupperswil case: the search for antennas was a useless tool



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It took 146 long days for the handcuffs to click and for the quadruple killer Thomas Nick (37) to get behind bars. Five years have passed since the cruel act of Rupperswil AG kept Switzerland on hold. It was the largest criminal case in years, one of the largest prosecution actions in Switzerland, which fortunately succeeded because Nick apparently wanted to attack again: when he was arrested, he had tools to threaten and tie people up.

But how did investigators find out about him? Although he left DNA and fingerprints at the crime scene, they did not result in a hit in any directory. Police also conducted an expensive antenna scan to determine which cell phones were active at the time of the crime. Since there is a highway and a railway line nearby, the special commission received cell phone numbers of around 30,000 people whose devices had been connected to the surrounding antennas in the hours around the crime.

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