Aschaffenburg killer was known to police after attacking Ukrainian woman but was not deported

28-year-old Afghan Enamulla Omarzai, who committed a murder in Aschaffenburg park on January 22 this year, was already known to law enforcement.

In August 2024, he attacked a Ukrainian woman with a knife in a refugee shelter in Alzenau, Bavaria. However, no investigation was initiated, and the man was not deported.

The attack on the Ukrainian woman was recorded by neighbors who filmed the incident, but the police did not classify it as a crime, considering it a “verbal conflict.” Authorities claimed that the victim did not have any obvious injuries, and no official complaint was filed.

Only two days after the murder in Aschaffenburg, the prosecution began investigating the attack on the Ukrainian woman, and a new criminal case for grievous bodily harm was opened against Omarzai. Witnesses, including a resident of the shelter, Mane, claimed that the woman had cuts on her body and there were traces of blood on the knife, but the police did not conduct a proper investigation. She also added that the victim did not speak German and did not have a lawyer, which prevented her from filing a complaint.

The tragedy in Aschaffenburg led to the deaths of two people, and local residents believe that these victims could have been saved if the authorities had taken timely action to deport the criminal.

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