Statement Against Evidence – There is no second statement because the victim is dead. The 35-year-old partner is charged. He is said to have beaten Innsbruck to death with punches and kicks in November.
“We wanted to get married, wanted children. We wanted to go through everything together. She was the center of my life,” the 35-year-old Tyrolean sobbed. During his long testimony, including before the president of the judge Nadja Obwieser, he had to take out his handkerchief a few times. He repeatedly protested how much he loved his girlfriend. He never deviates from the story he has been telling since the 911 call.
He never changed his version of the story
That in the morning of November 23, 2021, she had another attack of weakness and fell several times. That he spent more than 15 hours catching her, mounting her, persuading her to go to the clinic.
He himself was heavily under the influence of cannabis and tranquilizers. He couldn’t hold her, she kept slipping out of his hand like a “wet bag”. Again and again she tried to get up, only to fall on different objects again.
The autopsy report contradicts the suspect
According to the expert, the 35-year-old would have punched his girlfriend with his fist and kicked her with his bare feet. A tooth broke off, she had bleeding all over her body, typical “grabbing marks” on her arms and defensive injuries.
The young woman died after bleeding under the dura mater, which displaced the brain. Either the defendant hit her head against a smooth surface or she fell. Unconscious, she swallowed blood, vomited and probably inhaled blood. She died in the Innsbruck clinic on November 25.
Court pronounces clear conviction
No final sentence: 13 years in prison. But not for murder, but for intentionally inflicting serious bodily harm. The suspect can only stutter after the verdict.
Source: Krone

I am Ida Scott, a journalist and content author with a passion for uncovering the truth. I have been writing professionally for Today Times Live since 2020 and specialize in political news. My career began when I was just 17; I had already developed a knack for research and an eye for detail which made me stand out from my peers.