Deployment of SEK, urine assaults, fatal threats - Eastward battle for hunters!
Law enforcement is always on the move. On one side of the police station, there's Peter L., a 61-year-old forest owner and hunter. On the other side, there's a group of around a dozen local hunters who belong to a society.
For six years, there have been issues - now it's reached a sad turning point!
Who was responsible for sending the SEK to the hunting club's chief's house?
Now, the district court is trying to figure out which hunter, Thomas Frohberg (52), who leads the hunting society, sent the special operations team (SEK) to his own house through a fake helium balloon emergency call.
In the summer of 2020, a red children's helium balloon landed in the small Czech town of Tabor. At the bottom of it was a handwritten note that said, "SOS. HELP!!! I am being held captive, save me!!!!" Below that, an address in Mosigkau's Dessau district - Frohberg's address. And a warning: "PS: He has weapons!"
The SEK immediately went to Frohberg's uninvolved home. It didn't take long to realize that he was innocent. But was it Peter L. who tricked them?
Peter L. in the eyes of justice
Hunting society chief Frohberg: "There have been problems for years. From property damage and death threats to the time when the SEK agents raided my house."
The main cause for most cases, he says, is Peter L., a member of the hunting society. He's currently being tried for fabricating a criminal offense - the helium balloon incident.
Frohberg inherited his father's forest upon his father's death. But in the election for the hunting society's board, Peter L., his mother, and his son were allegedly excluded. He accuses, "The election was rigged. I filed a lawsuit because of violations of the election regulations."
Frohberg disagrees, "It was all nonsense! The contested election ran smoothly. He's the one who breaks rules and laws. His family makes our hunting a living nightmare. When we hunt, they visit the precinct, make noise, scare away the animals."
Peter L. claims that he and his family are victims: "They hate me because I reported them to the local prosecutor in 2018."
In 2018, Peter L. alleges to have found nearly 30 dead animals in a cornfield: "Many of them were pregnant sows and young animals. The animals had been shot or run over. It was horrifying."
The hunters deny the allegations. Thomas N., a hunter, says, "He threatened me that he would destroy my horses if they didn't leave his meadow." Another hunting companion says, "He shouted at me in the forest, 'One day I'll get you alone, then I'll kill you!'"
Peter L. protests, "At night, the hunters and their friends gathered around my house." He thinks there's a conspiracy: "They wanted to accomplish their goal with the threatening reports, that is, that my hunting permit would be revoked. But I had already given it away, so I could go back to hunting after being acquitted."
For now, he's suing the administrative court in Naumburg for the reissuance of his hunting license.
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Source: symclub.org