Shock twist after schoolgirls admit stabbing classmate to death ‘in revenge’ for telling teacher they were bullying her

Shock twist after schoolgirls admit stabbing classmate to death ‘in revenge’ for telling teacher they were bullying her


TWO German schoolgirls confessed to luring a classmate into the woods and stabbing her to death after she reportedly told a teacher they were bullying her.

The victim – named only as Luise under the country’s strict privacy laws – was knifed over 30 times near the small town of Freudenberg, which lies 50 miles east of Cologne.

Newsflash

Schoolgirl Luise was horrifically stabbed over 30 times in a wooded area in Germany[/caption]

Avalon.red

A huge police search was launched after the youngster was reported missing[/caption]

Avalon.red

Two pals, aged 12 and 13, confessed to the brutal killing – but won’t face prosecution[/caption]

Reuters

Locals left tributes close to where the 12-year-old’s body was found on Sunday[/caption]

The killers are said to have sought “revenge” after Luise informed the school she had been bullied by the duo for months, according to German newspaper Bild.

The 12-year-old was reported missing on Saturday afternoon when she did not return home after visiting the 13-year-old suspect.

The girl reportedly called Luise’s parents and span them a web of lies, saying their daughter was en route home at around 5.30pm and asking them to let her know when she had arrived.

She allegedly called the slain schoolgirl’s phone several times because she was “worried” – despite leaving Luise to die in the snowy woods.

They are said to have known each other for several years and took the bus to school together every day.

It is not yet clear why Luise met up with the girl in the Hohenhain district in light of the bullying accusations.

Her body was then tragically discovered on Sunday after cops launched a huge search with drones, sniffer dogs and a helicopter.

Luise had been dumped near a cycling path in the wooded area close to her home in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

Police later said the schoolgirl was wounded more than 30 times with a small knife and died from blood loss.

Two girls, aged 12 and 13, admitted to the murder in wake of the discovery.

Koblenz prosecutor Mario Mannweiler told a press conference: “The child died as a result of numerous knife wounds and the resulting loss of blood.”

He added that there was “no indication of a sexual offence” in the grisly case that has rocked the country.

“This is of course a very unusual and shocking act, even for us,” he said.

The two girls “made statements about the matter and in the end admitted the crime,” Florian Locker, head of Koblenz police’s homicide department, said.

They were both known to Luise and reportedly attended the same school as her – with the 13-year-old said to be in the same class.

But in a shocking twist, the pair have been taken into the custody of a youth welfare office instead of being hauled into a cell.

The age of criminal responsibility in Germany is 14, putting the two girls who stand charged under the age limit.

CHILLING DETAILS

Investigators have yet to locate the knife or knives used in the crime. Officers were seen scanning the wooded area with metal detectors.

Reports claim Luise was visiting the 13-year-old suspect at her home on Saturday before she went missing.

The younger girl then joined the two of them and the trio were spotted walking into the woods nearby by neighbours.

It is claimed that the 12-year-old was forced to assist in the killing by her older alleged accomplice.

After the savage attack, the girls returned to the 13-year-old’s house before the younger student was later picked up by her father.

Police said that under questioning, the two girls started to make contradictory statements before both confessed on Monday. 

The parents of the youngsters have moved away for the moment but remain in contact with their daughters.

According to local media reports, Luise had been friends with her killers but had fallen out with them. 

Stunned locals paid tribute to the schoolgirl, laying flowers and candles close to the wooded area where her body was found.

GERMANY ‘GRIEVING’

Hendrik Wuest, governor of North Rhine-Westphalia where Freudenberg is located, said he was appalled by the killing.

He said the state is “grieving” while insisting authorities will do all they can to uncover the circumstances surrounding the murder.

Wuest added: “It is incomprehensible and unbearable that children are capable of such horrible acts.”

Jürgen Süs, the deputy president of the Koblenz police directorate, said: “After more than 40 years in the job you still get cases that leave you speechless.”

The Esther-Bejarano comprehensive school, which Luise attended, also expressed its condolences amid the heartbreaking incident.

They said in a statement: “We lost our pupil, classmate and friend Luise at the weekend.

“Far too early, she was violently torn from our midst and from her family.

“Our thoughts and wishes are with her family and friends now and in the coming days.”

The case is eerily similar to that of the Slender Man Killings in 2014, which saw a girl stabbed 19 times.

Morgan Geyser and Anissa Weir, 12, believed they were being ordered to kill Payton Leutner, 12, by a fictional character called Slender Man.

The supernatural being is fabled to stalk children and is often depicted leading them into woodland.

At their trial, in 2017, Morgan admitted stabbing her friend “everywhere” and, sobbing, told the court: “Anissa said that she couldn’t do it and then I had to.”

Despite their young age at the time of the crime, they were tried as adults and Geyser was sentenced to 40 years in a secure psychiatric institution while Weier was given 25 years.

Brave Payton is at college and plans to go into the medical profession, partly inspired by her trauma.

Reuters

Cops were seen scanning the area with metal detectors as they hunt for the murder weapon[/caption]

Newsflash

The two suspects are said to have struck after falling out with their classmate[/caption]



News