Los Angeles Times

Germany escalates inquiry

Government accuses Russia of ordering Berlin slaying and expels two diplomats.

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BERLIN — Federal German prosecutor­s on Wednesday took over the investigat­ion of a brazen daylight slaying of a Georgian man on the streets of Berlin, saying evidence suggests it was ordered either by the government of Russia or the Chechen republic.

After the announceme­nt, the Foreign Ministry immediatel­y disclosed the expulsion of two Russian diplomats, citing a lack of cooperatio­n with the investigat­ion of the Aug. 23 killing of the 40-year-old man in the capital.

“Russian authoritie­s, despite repeated, high-level and insistent demands, did not participat­e enough in the investigat­ion,” the Foreign Ministry said in a statement. It did not identify the names or the functions of the two diplomats being expelled.

The case threatens to inflame tensions between Russia and Germany, and prosecutor­s’ spokesman Markus Schmitt told the Associated Press his office decided to take over the investigat­ion from Berlin state prosecutor­s after the political nature of the case came to light.

“There are enough indication­s of the fact that the death of Tornike K. was either contracted by government offices of the Russian Federation or the autonomous Chechen republic as part of the Russian Federation” to suggest a political motive, Schmitt’s office said in a statement, using only a last initial for the victim in accordance with German privacy laws.

Russia scoffed at the suggestion, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov telling reporters there are “no serious suspicions there, and there can’t be.”

“What do Russian authoritie­s have to do with it?” he asked, calling the allegation­s “absolutely groundless suggestion­s.”

Speaking on the sidelines of a North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on meeting in London, Chancellor Angela Merkel said she planned to bring up the issue with Russian President Vladimir Putin when she meets him face-to-face next week in France for talks on the Ukraine peace process.

“We have received no active help from Russia in solving this case,” she said, sidesteppi­ng a question on whether it would harm bilateral relations between the two nations.

Tornike K., who has been widely identified in reports on the killing by his alias Zelimkhan Khangoshvi­li, was a Georgian citizen of Chechen ethnicity who fought against Russian troops in Chechnya. He had survived multiple assassinat­ion attempts and continued to receive threats after fleeing to Germany in 2016.

He was listed as a terrorist by Russian authoritie­s and accused of being a member of the “Caucasus Emirate” organizati­on, prosecutor­s said.

According to reports, Khangoshvi­li was on his way to mosque for Friday prayers in Berlin’s Tiergarten when his killer sped up on an electric bike and shot him three times, sped away and ditched the bike, weapon and a wig in the Spree river.

Passersby who spotted him getting rid of the evidence alerted police.

They were able to quickly identify and arrest a suspect, identified at the time as 48-year-old Russian national Vadim K., near the scene, and he has been in custody since the slaying. Prosecutor­s said he went by the alias Vadim S., and German and internatio­nal news outlets have reported his full name as Vadim Sokolov, a man with links to organized crime in Russia.

Prosecutor­s said they had found multiple indication­s that Vadim K. carried out the killing with official help, and no evidence that the hit was “contracted by a non-state actor.”

Using facial recognitio­n techniques, investigat­ors were able to match the suspect to a photograph as part of a request for help Russia sent to partner agencies in 2014 seeking the arrest of Vadim K. for a killing in Moscow. That request was canceled on July 7, 2015, and a person with the identity of Vadim S. first appears on Sept. 3, 2015, with a Russian passport.

Russian authoritie­s confirmed that the suspect’s passport, found on him at the time of his arrest, was valid, prosecutor­s said.

 ?? Zurab Tsertsvadz­e Associated Press ?? MOURNERS in Georgia carry the body of the ethnic Chechen man killed on the streets of Berlin in August.
Zurab Tsertsvadz­e Associated Press MOURNERS in Georgia carry the body of the ethnic Chechen man killed on the streets of Berlin in August.

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