An anonymous letter was received by the weapons control authority in January raising concerns about a man named by German police as Philipp F, 35, saying that he appeared angry with his former fellow church members, but officers had found no reason for concern when they visited him last month.
The man, identified by local media as Philipp Fusz, a freelance business consultant, went on to shoot dead four men and two women aged 33 to 60, all German nationals, as well as killing the foetus of another woman who was seven months pregnant, during a spree that started at 9pm on Thursday evening.
Eight people were injured, four seriously, raising fears that the death toll will grow. Six of those are German citizens, one is from Uganda and the other from Ukraine. It is the first mass shooting in Hamburg's history.
Fusz, who had left the Jehovah's Witness church 18 months ago, went on to kill himself with his own weapon after members of a special forces unit stormed the hall and chased him up to the first storey of the three-storey pebble-dashed building near Hamburg's city centre.
"He is a former member of Jehovah's Witnesses who left the community voluntarily about a year and a half ago, but apparently not on good terms," said Thomas Radszuweit, Hamburg's head of state security.
This story is from the March 11, 2023 edition of The Guardian.
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This story is from the March 11, 2023 edition of The Guardian.
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