Man Gets Life for Poisoning Co-Workers' Sandwiches

German man found guilty of attempted murder
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 8, 2019 12:25 AM CST
Man Gets Life for Poisoning Co-Workers' Sandwiches
A 57-year old defendant hides his face at the courtroom in Bielefeld, Germany, Thursday, March 7, 2019.   (Friso Gentsch/dpa via AP)

A German man has been sentenced to life in prison for poisoning his co-workers' sandwiches with mercury and other substances over several years, leaving one in a coma and two others with serious kidney damage. A judge at the regional court in Bielefeld, about 205 miles west of Berlin, found the 57-year-old defendant guilty Thursday of attempted murder and gave him the maximum possible sentence, the AP reports. The man, identified only as Klaus O. in line with German privacy rules, was arrested in May after surveillance video showed him putting a suspicious powder on a colleague's sandwich at a business in the town of Schloss Holte-Stukenbrock.

When authorities searched his home, they found a primitive chemistry laboratory in the basement and a substance that Judge Georg Zimmermann described as "more dangerous than all combat agents used in World War II." O. refused to speak during his trial, and his motives remain unclear. Prosecutors believe he wanted to see his colleagues' physical decline. Two of them, a 27-year-old and the other age 67, suffered chronic kidney damage from poisoning with lead and cadmium and face a heightened risk of cancer. A 23-year-old trainee fell into a coma after ingesting mercury and has permanent brain damage. Zimmermann ordered that O. should remain in prison after completing the life sentence—which in Germany typically means serving 15 years—because he remains a danger to the public.

(More Germany stories.)

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