The Völklingen Verdict: Why a 19-Year-Traditional Was Acquitted of Murdering a Police Officer
The Landgericht Saarbrücken has acquitted 19-year-old Ahmet G. Of murder charges following the fatal shooting of police officer Simon Bohr. Instead, the court convicted the defendant of “particularly serious robbery” and ordered his commitment to a forensic psychiatric hospital, a decision that has triggered widespread condemnation from law enforcement and the victim’s family. The ruling centers on a violent encounter in August 2025 in Völklingen. According to court records and reports, Ahmet G.—who was 18 at the time—robbed a gas station and subsequently seized a service weapon from a police trainee. He fired 17 shots, six of which struck the 34-year-old Simon Bohr, resulting in the officer’s death. The Psychiatric Pivot: Capacity vs. Guilt The core of the legal controversy lies in the distinction between the psychiatric expert’s assessment and the judge’s final ruling. While the psychiatric expert had categorized the defendant as having “diminished capacity” (verminderte Schuldfähigkeit), the presiding judge ruled that the defendant was entirely “incapable of guilt” (schuldunfähig) at the moment the shots were fired.In German law, verminderte Schuldfähigkeit (diminished capacity) means the perpetrator’s ability to understand the wrongfulness of their act or to act according to that understanding was significantly impaired, potentially leading to a reduced sentence. Schuldunfähigkeit (incapability of guilt) means the perpetrator was completely unable to perceive the wrongfulness of the act or control their actions due to a mental disorder, which precludes a standard prison sentence in favor of psychiatric commitment.







