Acid attack on Bernhard Günther: Defendant surprised with new alibi

Break in negotiations
Acid attack on energy manager Günther: Defense surprises with new alibi

Bernhard Günther (r.), at the trial of one of his alleged assassins in mid-January

© Henning Kaiser / DPA

Was the defendant in the case of the acid attack on top manager Bernhard Günther not at the crime scene? Shortly before the end of the taking of evidence, the defense team came up with an alleged alibi from the 36-year-old.

In the trial surrounding the acid attack on top managers The defense lawyers have presented Bernhard Günther with a new, alleged alibi for their client. The defendant took part in a memorial service for his late father in Belgrade on the day of the crime, they claimed on Friday. Several family members could attest to this. This rules out the possibility that he was at the crime scene at the time of the crime.

Suspect looked different

In a second request for evidence, the defense stated that their client looked different on the day of the crime than in the photo from which Günther claimed to have recognized him. The court then suspended the hearing for several hours, but by the afternoon it had still not decided how to deal with the applications. The trial continues on February 19th.

An attack was carried out on Günther on March 4, 2018: two men ambushed the manager near his private home in Haan near Düsseldorf and doused him with highly concentrated sulfuric acid.

Bernhard Günther now in the service of Finns

A perpetrator with a Belgian passport has already been legally sentenced to twelve years in prison, and a second 36-year-old suspect, who is said to be an accomplice, is currently on trial. The client is said to be a top manager from the German energy industry who has not yet been publicly named and who wanted to eliminate Günther as a professional rival at the time.

Günther was seriously injured in the acid attack. Eyelids and parts of his facial skin had to be transplanted. At the time, the manager was the head of finance at the energy company Innogy, which was taken over by the Eon Group a few days later. Today he is a manager at the Finnish energy supplier Fortum with more than 19,000 employees.

Nik
DPA

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