Incriminating evidence
Cell phone fell into the blood of the murder victim
Now no amount of denial will help the Lambach murder suspect Jürgen H. (36): The victim's blood has not only been found on his hands - but also on his cell phone. He must have been on the phone at the crime scene shortly before the crime - and then the phone must have fallen into a pool of blood.
But the presumption of innocence applies - since the acquittal in the "Sauna-Gusti-Murder" in Linz, no one can rely one hundred percent on 99.9 percent DNA evidence. The Wels inmate also promptly doubts that the victim's blood was found under his fingernails: "It can't be true, you have to take another closer look," the excavator driver asserts his innocence: because the landlord Josef Muhr (68) was his best friend, who would have lent him money without having to pump him - and beat him to death. Especially as he would have earned enough the next day to pay off his debts if he had botched the job.
The fact that he had agreed to do this job is now proven by the call data, the transmission masts and the client with whom he spoke on the phone from the crime scene before the crime. The cell phone must have slipped out of the excavator driver's pocket. He wiped it clean - but not all the DNA traces.
Photos: Leitner/SID







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