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Crime

German gardener suspected of planting explosives

March 6, 2019

Police believe a gardener from southwestern Germany planted booby traps intended for his foes in the days before his own death. One explosive device already killed a man, and authorities fear there could be more.

A person watering flowers
Image: picture-alliance/C. Klose

German police have warned anyone who quarreled with now-deceased landscape gardener Bernhard Graumann to be on alert after it emerged that he may have planted bombs to harm those he perceived as enemies.

The 59-year-old was found dead at his home in the town of Mehlingen near Kaiserslautern in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate last week.

Authorities said they believe that the gardener, before his death, installed a booby-trapped device that killed a doctor in a nearby town on Friday. On Sunday, a 37-year-old woman and her 4-year-old daughter were injured when a log of firewood rigged with explosives blew up inside their house. Graumann is alleged to have had disputes with both the doctor and the family.

Read moreThousands evacuated as WWII bomb defused in Cologne

More booby traps out there?

Westpfalz police spokesman Bernhard Christian Erfort told The Associated Press on Wednesday that his office had received dozens of calls about the case — mainly from people concerned about contact they'd had with the gardener. A special commission has been set up to examine these reports.

Another rigged fireplace log was found Wednesday in a woodpile at the home of a woman in a different town who had clashed with Graumann, police said. That log was destroyed by bomb disposal experts.

Read moreGerman police evacuate Potsdam Christmas market on 'IED' suspicion

Graumann's initial autopsy was inconclusive, but police say there was no sign of foul play. The results of a toxicology report are expected in the coming days.

Investigators said they found black powder and other items that were "in violation of weapons and explosives laws" in a search of the gardener's home.

"It cannot be ruled out that the deceased made other preparations that could endanger further people," they said.

Living with Bombs - Unexploded World War II devices

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nm/sms (AP, dpa)

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