• ترند خبری :
چهارشنبه ۲۱ آبان ۱۴۰۴ | WED 12 Nov 2025
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  • تاریخ انتشار:1404-08-2100:32:30
  • خبرگزاری:آرتی

Man arrested over darknet kill list targeting Merkel and Scholz – media


The suspect sought cryptocurrency donations as bounties for “death sentences” on public figures, according to prosecutors

A German citizen with alleged neo-Nazi ties has been arrested on suspicion of running a darknet platform that called for the killing of politicians and other public figures, according to media reports.

The 49-year-old suspect, identified as Martin S., who also holds Polish citizenship, was detained late on Monday in the city of Dortmund, where he lives with his family, and later placed in pre-trial detention. He reportedly faces charges including financing terrorism and providing instructions for committing an act of violence that endangers the state.

The suspect is accused of operating an ‘Assassination Politics’ website on the darknet, where he allegedly published personal data, “death sentences” and hit lists naming more than 20 potential victims. The targets reportedly included senior politicians such as former chancellors Angela Merkel and Olaf Scholz, as well as judges and prosecutors.

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Prosecutors said he had been operating the platform anonymously since at least June 2025, posting instructions for making explosives and soliciting cryptocurrency donations later offered as bounties for killing targeted individuals.

The platform also carried right-wing extremist, racist, and conspiracy-driven content, according to reports.

Local media said that the suspect had contacts with neo-Nazis and took part in far-right events. Some outlets, including Bild, also claimed that he is considered a supporter of the Reichsburger (Reich Citizens) movement – a far-right, conspiracy-driven network that denies the legitimacy of the modern German state. Adherents claim that the historical German Reich continues to exist and refuse to recognize Germany’s government, parliament, laws and courts. Many also reject obligations such as paying taxes or fines.

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Germany’s domestic intelligence agency estimates that around 25,000 people nationwide belong to the Reichsburger and related groups, with some considered prone to violence.