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Germany: One dead, three wounded in stabbing at train station

 
Police investigate the scene of a stabbing at a station in Grafing near Munich, Germany, on Tuesday. Police said one person died in a hospital after the stabbing. Police said the suspected assailant was a 27-year-old German national. [Associated Press]
Police investigate the scene of a stabbing at a station in Grafing near Munich, Germany, on Tuesday. Police said one person died in a hospital after the stabbing. Police said the suspected assailant was a 27-year-old German national. [Associated Press]
Published May 10, 2016

GRAFING, Germany — A German man was arrested after several people were stabbed at a train station near Munich early Tuesday, authorities said. One victim died in a hospital and three other people were wounded.

The assailant made "politically motivated comments" as he attacked, Ken Heidenreich, spokesman for the Munich prosecutor's office in charge of the case, told the Associated Press. He said his office was investigating witness reports that he yelled "Allahu Akbar," Arabic for "God is great."

The Latest: Read the most current updates on this story from the Associated Press

"It's going in that direction," Heidenreich said of his office's initial information following the stabbing at the Grafing Bahnhof station, some 30 kilometers (nearly 20 miles) east of Munich.

Officials also raised the possibility that the man was mentally disturbed. Heidenreich said that the suspect is a 27-year-old German citizen, with a German-sounding name.

"We have no information that he is a recent immigrant here or of that background, but we don't know for sure at the moment," he said, adding that the man didn't live in Bavaria.

The attack comes at a sensitive time in Germany after the influx of some 1.1 million migrants last year and growing concerns about how the country will deal with them, particularly in Bavaria, their usual state of entry.

The suspect attacked several people with a 4-inch knife shortly before 11 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time, police said.

Police spokesman Irwin Heumann said the 56-year-old victim who died — his age was initially given by authorities as 50 — was attacked aboard the train. He said it was not yet clear where the three wounded victims were assaulted.

The other victims were men aged 43, 55 and 58. Their names weren't released.

Heidenreich said one of the survivors had "serious injuries" but that he had no details on whether they were thought to be life-threatening.

The suspect comes from the central state of Hesse, Heumann said. He had no further details but police and prosecutors planned a press conference Tuesday afternoon.

At the scene, police forensic experts in white coveralls marked more than 40 bloody footprints — some of them barefoot — on the train platform with chalk numbers and collected evidence, including a cellphone that was pulled from the gap between the train and platform.

Alongside the possibility of a politically motivated attack, Bavaria's top security official, Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann, said officials also will look into whether he was mentally disturbed, "perhaps because of drug addiction."

Grafing has some 13,500 inhabitants. The rail station where the stabbing happened is some way from the town center. It is served by a Munich commuter line and faster trains on the Munich-Salzburg main line.

Mayor Angelika Obermayr described Grafing as "an absolutely peaceful little Bavarian town."

"Something like this is absolutely new and shakes people deeply — otherwise, they only know this kind of thing from television," she said. "That it could happen here is absolutely stupefying."