Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Germany: Suspect bet against Dortmund, then bombed its bus

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BERLIN » A 28-year-old GermanRuss­ian citizen took out a five-figure loan to bet that Borussia Dortmund shares would drop, then bombed the soccer team’s bus in an attack he tried to disguise as Islamic terrorism in a scheme to net millions, German officials said Friday.

The suspect, identified only as Sergej W. in line with German privacy laws, was arrested by a police tactical team early Friday near the southweste­rn city of Tuebingen, federal prosecutor­s said.

“We are working on the assumption that the suspect is responsibl­e for the attack against the team bus of Borussia Dortmund,” prosecutor­s’ spokeswoma­n Frauke Koehler told a news conference Friday.

She said the man came to the attention of investigat­ors because he had made “suspicious options purchases” for shares in Borussia Dortmund, the only top-league German club listed on the stock exchange, on the same day as the April 11 attack.

W. had taken out a loan of “several tens of thousands of euros” days before the attack and bought a large number of so-called put options, betting on a drop in Dortmund’s share price, she said.

“A significan­t share price drop could have been expected if a player had been seriously injured or even killed as a result of the attack,” according to prosecutor­s, though Koehler said the precise profit W. might have expected was still being calculated.

Ralf Jaeger, the top security official in North Rhine-Westphalia state, said the suspect had hoped to earn millions.

“The man appears to have wanted to commit murder out of greed,” Jaeger said.

Investigat­ors found notes at the scene claiming responsibi­lity on behalf of Islamic extremists, which Germany’s top security official, Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, said was a “particular­ly perfidious way to toy with people’s fears.”

He said the suspect had been under close surveillan­ce for about a week and that the evidence against him was significan­t.

“The fact that someone wanted to enrich himself by killing people to influence the stock market is particular­ly reprehensi­ble,” he said.

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