Germany: 3 foreigners beat man at Rosenheim train station simply because he asked them to be quieter

Asking someone to turn their music down or lower their voice in modern Europe can quickly escalate into a vicious assault

By Remix News Staff
4 Min Read

At a German train station in the city of Rosenheim, three foreigners are accused of beating a 38-year-old man because he asked them to be quieter on Sunday morning. The beating comes shortly after a foreign national beat a German train controller to death earlier this month.

The three suspects, who are from Yemen, Eritrea, and Sierra Leone, have all been charged with grievous bodily harm, according to the Federal Police Directorate Munich.

After the man asked them to be quieter, an argument ensued, and the three men jumped the victim.

When police arrived, they found two men on the ground in a fight. Witnesses told police that two other suspects had been involved and had just fled. Police tracked them down in the city of Rosenheim, according to Welt newspaper.

The victim suffered several lacerations to his face due to the assault.

The suspects are aged 35, 31, and 28 and have all been registered in the German immigration system.

Police conducted a breathalyzer and found the men had elevated blood alcohol levels of “around one and almost two per mille.”

The men have already been released from custody after being charged.

The assault aligns with general trends, which show that foreigners are vastly overrepresented in serious crimes on German public transport.

Foreigners are responsible for 62 percent of all crimes in the German state of Baden-Württemberg on public transport, despite being only 16 percent of the population.

The state of Saxony, which has a relatively small migrant population, has seen a crime explosion, with 50 percent of crimes at train stations committed by foreigners

According to German federal police data, foreigners commit 59 percent of all sexual crimes on German trains and train stations, the latest crime data shows. Sexual violence crimes have doubled between 2019 and 2024.

This all comes at a time when the left is increasingly promoting public transport for the German population as a solution to climate change.

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