Culture

Females take apart emergency care unit.

Rarely do police cars pass by this area, as the medical staff at Altona Hospital primarily cares for the smallest patients - newborns, toddlers, and teenagers. However, on Tuesday night at midnight, police had to arrive and detain a 12-year-old and two 13-year-olds.

SymClub
May 30, 2024
1 min read
NewsChildren's homeAltona-AltstadtAdolescentPoliceHamburg regional newsChildrenEmergency roomHamburgNews domesticDamage to property
The Altona Children's Hospital has been in existence since 1859 and has beds for children and...
The Altona Children's Hospital has been in existence since 1859 and has beds for children and adolescents

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Hamburg children's hospital. - Females take apart emergency care unit.

Three girls, believed to have been under the influence of drugs and alcohol, caused a commotion at a hospital in Hamburg's Reeperbahn area. Hospital spokeswoman Svenja Ebert revealed that the three were brought to the Altona Children's Hospital's central emergency room by ambulance. However, their behavior soon deteriorated, as the girls began to harass staff, young patients, and their parents, according to Ebert.

The 12-year-old and one of the 13-year-olds allegedly broke a screen, destroyed a plexiglass window, threw objects from tables, smashed a display stand, and broke a lamp. The third girl, who was attempting to calm the situation, was not involved in these actions.

One witness described the scene in the "Hamburger Abendblatt" as horrifying. She and her nine-year-old son were verbally and physically assaulted by the girls, with one even spitting at and kicking the man and his child. The woman's glasses were destroyed, and her son was threatened with death.

Frantic, the woman begged the girls to leave them alone, but this only fueled the escalation of the situation. The two girls seemingly went "berserk," and the witnesses had no choice but to flee to their car for safety. Police arrested the girls, who were not of criminal age, and transferred them to the Children and Youth Emergency Service (KJND). The girls were not living with their parents but in a youth care facility at the time.

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