Should be detained – Tyrol: the body in the tent was a fugitive

Now the background of the corpse found in the Tyrolean Martinswand near Zirl (Innsbruck-Land) comes to light: The deceased was an Innsbrucker who apparently wanted to hide from the authorities there. He should have served a prison sentence.

“In 100 years, no one will be able to get past the spot where the tent with the skeleton was located,” says a local. Of course, the exception proves the rule. A hiking trail leads to the Kirchbergköpfl south of the Neue Magdeburger Hütte. But that’s where it ends, the – in itself – inaccessible wilderness begins. Two climbers broke into it on April 21 in search of new routes. Southeast below the Kirchbergköpfl, they abseiled down a rock face and discovered the tent of the man, who was born in 1963, as it turned out. As reported in detail, its identity could only be determined by evaluating DNA samples. According to the police, he was registered in Innsbruck years ago. Did not appear at his trial in 2015. As it turned out, the Innsbrucker probably used the remote place in the wilderness as a hiding place. According to an insider, the police had investigated him after a crime. “Nothing really big,” the insider continued. A notice at large followed. In 2015, the court hearing in this matter took place. However, the man did not want to “give it” to himself. He did not appear and was sentenced to imprisonment in absentia. However, he did not start the search. The police then wrote the Innsbruck man out for a search, which was unsuccessful. The man, who no longer had any contact with his relatives, may have successfully “abseiled” down to the hiding place between Martinswand and Kirchbergköpfl. This seemed more pleasant to him than everyday prison life. It is no longer possible to find out how he actually died. There are no indications of third-party debt. However, the expiry date on a food item that was seized suggests that it may have been as early as 2015 or 2016. Tragic: nobody has really missed him since then.
source site-12