German Knife Killer Alexander, Mohamed, Justin: The Berlin Name List Doesn't Say Anything, but the AfD Is the only Helper
9 Articles
9 Articles
The Berlin Senate has wrongly refused to mention the first names of German knife offenders, a court ruled. However, the problems lie elsewhere.
The Berlin Senate should not have simply rejected an AfD request for the first names of alleged Messer-Käter – that was decided by the Berlin Constitutional Court. At five against four, the judge's decision was scarce.
Senate Must Communicate First Names of Knife Offenders – Judgment of the Berlin Constitutional Court
The AfD wanted to know the first names for 1197 German suspects. The Senate refused to issue them with reference to their personal rights.
The AfD wins the Constitutional Court against the Berlin Senate. It is now supposed to be the 20 most common first names of the German suspects ... The post AfD wins in court: Berlin Senate must call the first names of Messer criminals appeared first on Apollo News.
The Constitutional Court of Berlin has ruled that the Berlin Senate violated the parliamentary right of an AfD member of parliament to ask questions. The reason for this is the Senate's inadequate justification for refusing to answer a question from Marc Vallendar about the 20 most common first names of certain suspects, the Senate Department for Justice and Consumer Protection announced on Wednesday. In a written inquiry, the member of parliame…
According to the State Constitutional Court, the request of an AfD politician for the attribution of suspected knife attackers was wrongly rejected by the Berlin Senate. The majority of judges were not satisfied with the reasons.
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- 33% of the sources lean Left, 33% of the sources are Center, 33% of the sources lean Right
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