Eternal Prison for the Double Killer

In 1989, the defendant and the victim were married in their native Kosovo. A year later, as war refugees, they settled in Germany He had killed his wife and son - in - law at Nürtingen. For this double murder, he must serve eternal punishment. German Judge Jörg Geiger of the Court of [...]
In 1989, the defendant and the victim were married in their native Kosovo. A year later, as war refugees, they settled in Germany
He had killed his wife and son-in-law at Nürtingen. For this double murder, he must serve eternal punishment.
German Judge Jörg Geiger, from the Court of Stuttgart, has included the drama in two words: “The defendant committed a terrible crime, which no one but him has been able to imagine”. As a result, two families have fallen into the abyss.
Judge Geiger has spoken over the 53-year-old defendant at the dock of the accused, who in July last year, in the Nürtingen district of Reuden became double killers. The German court sentenced the defendant to life imprisonment. His work was highly esteemed by albinfo.ch.
With that ruling, the Court supported the prosecutor's proposal, while defence attorney efforts to sow doubts about the murder prosecution failed. The event took place on July 17th, when his 20th-year-old daughter and her 40-year-old partner have been having a pleasant family evening. Her mother, three sisters, and her niece were on the visit. Suddenly, they also joined her father and brother. At first, everything was best, but later, Father, and especially his brother, had a struggle. Apparently, the large family consisting of the Kosovo couple with five children is divided into two factions. Some of the brothers and sisters opposed their father and son.
After he had torn his wife's hair off by insulting her with an obscene word, the father had left, followed by his son. The car has been launched briefly, but immediately it stops. Dad comes down and shoots the girl's boyfriend. Mom's starting to leave the scene while her boyfriend's down on the floor. After that, my mother fell down on the floor.
Judge Geiger has ascertained: “If his wife did not want to live with him, she should no longer live”, conveys the words of Judge “Stutgarter Nachrichten”, reports Albinfo.ch.
In 1989, the defendant and the victim were married in their native Kosovo. A year later, as war refugees, they settled in Germany. He started working as a locksmith as he had five children to buy a residence in Köngen. The marriage seemed to begin to fade when the woman started working at a hotel in Wernau, but the defendant denied it.











