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German city of Trier grieves a day after 5 killed by SUV

At several places in the pedestrian zone in Trier, Germany, people have put up candles.
One of several makeshift memorials for the victims in Trier, Germany, where an SUV plowed into a crowd, killing five people and injuring 18 others, six seriously.
(Oliver Dietze / dpa )
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Residents of Trier placed flowers and lit candles at the base of the southwestern German city’s landmark Roman gate Wednesday in tribute to the five people who were killed and more than a dozen others injured when an SUV plowed through a central pedestrian zone.

A judge ordered the suspect, a 51-year-old local man whose name hasn’t been released, held in custody as he is investigated on five counts of murder and 18 counts of attempted murder and causing bodily harm, prosecutor Peter Fritzen said in a statement.

Authorities do not believe the suspect drove into the pedestrians on Tuesday for any political, religious or similar reason, but haven’t yet been able to determine a motive, Fritzen said.

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Statements the suspect made to police immediately after his arrest kept changing and were “partially incomprehensible,” the prosecutor said.

“The suspect also showed psychological abnormalities in his behavior during and after his arrest and in police custody,” Fritzen said. A comprehensive psychological examination has been ordered, but at the moment there are no “concrete indications” of a mental health condition that would rule out holding the suspect responsible for his actions.

The man had been drinking heavily before the attack, Fritzen said. Questioning will continue over the next few days.

“The victims and their families need answers,” Trier Mayor Wolfram Leibe told reporters near the makeshift memorial that was growing at the Roman gate, the Porta Nigra, near where the driver was arrested.

The five people killed included a 45-year-old man and his 9½-week-old daughter. The man’s wife and 1½-year-old son were among the injured receiving treatment in a hospital, police said.

Police originally identified the baby as a 9-month-old but then corrected her age. The others killed were three women, ages 25, 52 and 73.

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All of those killed were German citizens, and the man and his baby also had Greek citizenship, Fritzen said.

Of the 18 people injured, six were considered in serious condition. The injured included a dual German-Dutch national and a citizen of nearby Luxembourg.

Police received the first call about the attack at 1:47 p.m. and were able to apprehend the suspect four minutes later after he stopped the car and they blocked him in.

Zigzagging through the pedestrian zone, the vehicle traveled about 875 yards in total, “leaving behind him a trail of dead, injured and rubble,” police said.

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