Institutional Failure — Documented

The Criminal Case — How the Justice System Dropped an Asbestos Case

A tenant files a criminal complaint. Police investigate for three months and document the “worst-case scenario.” The prosecution drops the case in a single paragraph. The General Prosecutor confirms. Case number 281 UJs 699/21.

What happens when a tenant tries to hold a state-owned landlord criminally accountable for concealing asbestos? This page documents what happened in Berlin — step by step, from case files.

In May 2021, the tenant files a criminal complaint. The charges under German law: negligent bodily injury (§ 229 StGB — the equivalent of criminal negligence causing harm) and illegal waste management (§ 326 StGB — an environmental crime). Berlin's State Criminal Police, Department for Environmental Crimes, investigates for three months. The lead detective's conclusion: grinding asbestos adhesive in a sealed apartment represents “pretty much the worst-case scenario.”

Six weeks after that report, the prosecution drops the case. Reason: the complaint was filed too late, and there is no public interest. An appeal and objection to the General Prosecutor both fail.

The investigation file is 172 pages long. It documents a complaint that was meticulously prepared. Police work that confirmed every fact. And a justice system that treats a systematic asbestos scandal affecting over 17,000 apartments as the private problem of one tenant.

Why does the prosecution drop a case in which the police themselves document the “worst-case scenario”?

See also: Schork vs. Zirngast — the civil case, where degewo's crisis law firm contradicts its own evidence.

Criminal Case Timeline

From the criminal complaint to the General Prosecutor — 13 months, three instances, zero consequences.

18.05.2021

Criminal Complaint by RA Dr. Schüttpelz

Charge: Negligent bodily injury (§ 229 StGB) and illegal waste management (§ 326 Abs. 1 StGB) against "unknown responsible business representatives at DEGEWO". Four-page complaint with reference to 1.2 million asbestos fibers/m³ during grinding work.

Source: Criminal complaint, pages 2–5 of investigation file

03.06.2021

Prosecutor Orders Investigation

Prosecutor Falkenstein refers the case to LKA 336 — the Department for Environmental Crimes. Assignment: Check whether asbestos was in the apartment, interview the victim, conduct inquiries at degewo.

Source: Prosecutor's directive, page 9

01.07.2021

LKA 336 Begins Investigation

Criminal Chief Inspector Tomalla takes over the case. Formal criminal complaint with two charges: § 229 StGB (negligent bodily injury) and § 326 Abs. 1 StGB (illegal waste management). Crime scene: Graunstraße 7, 13355 Berlin.

Source: Criminal complaint LKA, pages 11–13

03.08.2021

Witness Interview at LKA

Over two-hour interview (09:53–12:12) at Kaiserdamm. The victim describes in detail the 2012 renovation, grinding work without protective equipment, information blockade by degewo, and health consequences. Submits evidence: agreement, photos, expert opinion.

Source: Witness interview, pages 36–47

08.10.2021

"Worst-Case Scenario"

Criminal Chief Inspector Tomalla prepares a 3-page report. Central passage: "In particular, grinding asbestos-containing building materials with a normal grinding machine in enclosed apartments would, in terms of releasing many asbestos fibers and endangering people present, represent pretty much the worst-case scenario." She refers the matter to the prosecutor for decision.

Source: Report by Criminal Chief Inspector Tomalla, pages 104–106

18.11.2021

Prosecutor Discontinues Case

Prosecutor Falkenstein discontinues the proceedings pursuant to § 170 Abs. 2 StPO. Reason: the criminal complaint was not filed in a timely manner (§ 230 Abs. 1 StGB). The victim became aware of the offense in 2018. Furthermore, special public interest is denied because "no substantial injuries were caused".

Source: Discontinuance decision Prosecutor Falkenstein, 281 UJs 699/21

10.12.2021

Appeal Filed

RA Dr. Schüttpelz files an appeal against the discontinuance decision and requests access to the case file. Access is granted on December 14.

Source: Appeal brief, page 114

23.05.2022

Appeal Rejected

The prosecutor rejects the appeal. The appeal decision confirms the discontinuance.

Source: Appeal decision Prosecutor Berlin, 23.05.2022

16.06.2022

General Prosecutor Confirms

Senior Prosecutor Heisig (Case no. 121 Zs 393/22) dismisses the objection. He even questions whether the health impairments can "causally be attributed to the purported criminal act at all". The criminal complaint is "in any case untimely". Public interest is "reasonably denied".

Source: General Prosecutor Berlin, 121 Zs 393/22

7 Contradictions — What the Justice System Says vs. What the Files Show

Seven central contradictions between the justification for discontinuance and the contents of the investigation file itself.

Contradiction 01

"Criminal Complaint Untimely"

Prosecutor Falkenstein: "The criminal complaint required under § 230 Abs. 1 StGB was not filed in a timely manner. Your client became aware of the offense in 2018."

General Prosecutor Heisig: "The three-month period begins when the perpetrator can be individually identified. Knowledge of the name is not required. However, this was already the case in 2018."

Source — Discontinuance decision 18.11.2021 & General Prosecutor decision 16.06.2022

In autumn 2018, degewo told the tenant by phone that the apartment was "contaminated". The word asbestos was never mentioned. The degewo employees made "no concrete statements" and refused to give a clear answer. Only after weeks of insistence, personal research, and advice from the tenants' association could the tenant narrow down the type of contaminant.

The criminal complaint is directed against "unknown responsible business representatives". RA Dr. Schüttpelz wrote in the complaint itself: "The identification of personal responsibility exceeds my client's investigative capabilities, which is why he is now bringing the matter to the prosecutor's office." He explicitly demanded that the company's internal chain of command be investigated to determine a specific defendant.

Assessment: The statute of limitations calculation assumes the victim could "individually identify the perpetrator" in 2018. But the tenant didn't even know it was asbestos at that time — degewo only mentioned "contaminants". And even after that, he had no way to identify the specific person responsible within the company — his own lawyer documented exactly that in the complaint. The statute is being used against the victim, even though degewo itself withheld the decisive information.

Contradiction 02

"No Substantial Injuries"

Prosecutor Falkenstein: "No substantial injuries were caused by the offense."

Source — Discontinuance decision 18.11.2021

The investigation file contains two indications of health damage: First, there is a professional statement from a treating therapist. Second, there is a long-term physical risk — according to EU Directive 1999/77/EG, there is no threshold below which chrysotile asbestos is not associated with cancer risk. During grinding work, approximately 1.2–1.5 million asbestos fibers per cubic meter of room air were released. Mesothelioma risk manifests itself only after 20–40 years.

Additionally: The Berlin Regional Court (Judgment of 17.01.2018, Case no. 18 S 140/16) ruled in a comparable case that the landlord is liable because he "did not timely warn of the health hazards posed by asbestos-containing materials". RA Dr. Schüttpelz already referred to this judgment in the criminal complaint. If even a civil court acknowledges health hazards, the criminal justice statement of "no substantial injuries" is all the more questionable.

Assessment: The prosecutor downplays the danger. The file itself contains a therapist's statement, asbestos exposure with long-term cancer risk, and relevant civil case law. By this logic, there is no substantial injury as long as you're not terminally ill.

Contradiction 03

"No Public Interest"

Prosecutor Falkenstein: "Criminal prosecution in this case is not a matter of current public concern."

General Prosecutor Heisig: "The prosecutor reasonably denied special public interest."

Source — Discontinuance decision 18.11.2021 & General Prosecutor decision 16.06.2022

The investigation file itself contains evidence to the contrary:

17,000 degewo apartments are suspected of asbestos contamination (Berliner Woche, 18.12.2018, in file pages 101ff). degewo is a state-owned company — it belongs to the state of Berlin.

As early as 2000, the Berlin Senate confirmed in Minor Inquiry No. 14/219: 14,400 degewo apartments with asbestos-containing flexboard panels. This document is in the file (page 49).

An ARD Contraste documentary (16.01.2020) and reporting by Berliner Woche and Berliner Zeitung documented the case publicly.

Assessment: A state-owned housing company that knowingly withholds an asbestos hazard from at least 17,000 tenants is not "a matter of public concern"? The police collected these documents. The prosecutor ignored them.

Contradiction 04

"Psychological Harm Not Causally Attributable"

General Prosecutor Heisig: "It may be left open whether the health impairments asserted by your client, which only occurred upon learning that he had been exposed to asbestos, can causally be attributed to the purported criminal act at all."

Source — General Prosecutor Berlin, 121 Zs 393/22, 16.06.2022

The General Prosecutor argues: Because health impairments arose only after learning about the asbestos exposure, they may not be attributable to the offense.

The causal chain is clear: (1) degewo conceals asbestos → (2) tenant grinds asbestos-containing adhesive without protection → (3) tenant learns years later of the exposure → (4) health impairments from knowledge of long-term risk. Without the negligent omission in step 1, there would be no step 4.

Assessment: The General Prosecutor's argument means: If you are poisoned but only learn about it later, your suffering doesn't count. It severs the offense (asbestos exposure through omission) from its consequence (health impairments) and declares the connection questionable. This is like saying: Trauma from a car accident is not attributable to the accident's cause, because it occurred after the impact.

Contradiction 05

"Worst-Case Scenario" — But Discontinued

Criminal Chief Inspector Tomalla, report of 08.10.2021: "In particular, grinding asbestos-containing building materials with a normal grinding machine in enclosed apartments would, in terms of releasing many asbestos fibers and endangering people present, represent pretty much the worst-case scenario."

Source — Report by Criminal Chief Inspector Tomalla, pages 104–106

Six weeks after this report, the prosecutor discontinues the case. The one-sided discontinuance decision does not address the police report at all. No engagement with the "worst-case scenario" assessment. No explanation for why there is no public interest despite maximum danger.

Assessment: The police invested three months in solid investigation. Witness interviews, register searches, commercial registry extracts, analysis of civil files. The result: clear documentation of maximum health hazard. The prosecutor dismisses it with a single paragraph.

Contradiction 06

One Defendant — No One Else

The discontinuance is issued "against the defendant ". A single individual.

Source — Prosecutor Berlin directive, 18.11.2021

The criminal complaint was directed against "unknown responsible business representatives at DEGEWO" — plural, not singular. The police investigated multiple persons involved: Kerstin Urbanowicz (agreement for structural modifications, 04.02.2012), Ingrid Kleinecke (Customer Service North, 2018), Kai Bauschke (maintenance).

Since 2005, Christoph Beck has been continuously listed as Managing Director of degewo AG in the commercial register. The police requested the commercial register extract (27 pages, pages 116–142). Organizational responsibility was never examined.

Assessment: The criminal complaint targets systemic failure of a state-owned company. The prosecutor reduces it to a single person — then discontinues even that person's case. The question of organizational responsibility, the internal chain of command, and management liability is never raised.

Contradiction 07

Police Investigates Thoroughly — Prosecutor Does Not

Criminal Chief Inspector Tomalla, LKA 336: Three-hour witness interview. Securing evidence (expert opinions, photos, agreements). Register searches for degewo employees. 27-page commercial register extract. 3-page final report with summary and legal analysis. Requested time extension to work thoroughly.

Source — Investigation file, pages 9–106

Prosecutor Falkenstein: A one-sided discontinuance decision. No independent interview. No questioning of degewo. No engagement with the police report. No examination of organizational responsibility. No assessment of 17,000 affected apartments.

Assessment: The investigation file reveals two different organizational cultures. The police treat the case as what it is: a potential environmental crime with substantial health hazard. The prosecutor treats it as a file to be closed.

Overview of the 7 Contradictions

No. Contradiction What the Justice System Says What the Files Show
1 Criminal Complaint Untimely Offense known 2018, 3-month period missed. 2018 no word "asbestos". Responsible parties not identifiable without investigative authority.
2 No Substantial Injuries No substantial injuries caused. Therapist statement: F43 diagnoses. 1.2–1.5 million asbestos fibers/m³. Long-term cancer risk.
3 No Public Interest No public concern. 17,000 apartments. State-owned company. Parliamentary inquiry. Media reports.
4 Causality Questioned Health impairments not attributable to offense. Causal chain clear: Concealment → Exposure → Knowledge → Health impairments.
5 Worst-Case Scenario Discontinued despite police report. LKA documents maximum hazard. Prosecutor ignores it completely.
6 One Defendant Proceedings only against . Complaint against "unknown business representatives". Organizational responsibility never examined.
7 Police vs. Prosecutor One-page discontinuance. 3 months police investigation. 3-page report. Three-hour interview. Ignored.

Pattern of Discontinuance

Systematic Rather Than Isolated

The discontinuance rationale follows a pattern frequently observed in environmental and health crime cases: (1) Statute of limitations or timeliness issues as procedural obstacles — even though the defendant's information blockade prevented timely filing. (2) Denial of public interest — even though thousands of tenants are affected and a state-owned company bears responsibility. (3) Individualization rather than organizational responsibility — a single person is charged, systemic failure of an organization is not examined. The result: Three instances, zero consequences.

Actors in the Criminal Case

Prosecutor Falkenstein

Prosecutor at the Berlin Public Prosecution Service, GSt 281. Initially ordered investigation by LKA. Discontinued proceedings on 18.11.2021 with a one-sided decision. Reason: timeliness issue and lack of public interest.

Senior Prosecutor Heisig

Senior Prosecutor at the Berlin General Prosecutor's Office. Dismissed the objection on 16.06.2022. Additionally questioned causality between asbestos exposure and health impairments. Case no. 121 Zs 393/22.

Criminal Chief Inspector Tomalla

Criminal Chief Inspector at LKA 336, Department for Environmental Crimes. Conducted thorough investigation: witness interview, evidence preservation, register searches, 3-page final report. Documented the "worst-case scenario".

RA Dr. Schüttpelz

Specialist lawyer for criminal law. Filed the criminal complaint on 18.05.2021, filed appeal, and submitted objection to the General Prosecutor's Office. Represented the victim through all three instances.

Relevant Legal Norms

Main Offense

§ 229 StGB — Negligent Bodily Injury

Whoever by negligence causes bodily injury to another person is punished with imprisonment for up to three years or with a fine. Requires a criminal complaint (§ 230 StGB).

Environmental Crime

§ 326 StGB — Illegal Waste Management

Official crime. Whoever treats, stores, or disposes of waste containing toxins or pathogens outside of a licensed facility. Penalty: up to five years. No criminal complaint required.

Procedural Law

§ 170 Abs. 2 StPO — Discontinuance

The prosecutor discontinues proceedings if the investigation provides no sufficient grounds for bringing public charges. Not an acquittal — no determination of innocence.

Timeliness Issue

§ 230 StGB — Criminal Complaint Deadline

The criminal complaint must be filed within three months of learning of the offense and the perpetrator. Key question: When was the perpetrator "individually identifiable"?

EU Law

EU Directive 1999/77/EG

"No threshold has yet been determined below which chrysotile asbestos is not associated with cancer risk." Every fiber counts.

Full case law analysis (German)

Civil Law

LG Berlin 18 S 140/16

Landlords must inform tenants of known asbestos contamination. Violation of duty to protect, care, and provide security. Cited in investigation file as evidence.

Full case law analysis (German)

Why This Matters Beyond Berlin

This is not an isolated German story. The pattern documented here — a state-owned landlord concealing a known hazard, a tenant left to fight alone, a justice system that protects institutional interests — repeats across jurisdictions. From the UK's council housing asbestos crisis to Australia's Mr Fluffy homes, from New York's NYCHA to France's HLM social housing: when institutions know about contamination and choose silence, the legal system rarely holds them accountable.

What makes this case unusual is not the pattern. It is the documentation. 172 pages of investigation files. Every contradiction between police findings and prosecution reasoning, preserved in official records. A complete paper trail showing how institutional accountability fails — not through conspiracy, but through procedure.

One Case. Three Instances. Zero Consequences.

The police document the worst-case scenario. The prosecution drops it. The General Prosecutor confirms. 17,000 apartments under asbestos suspicion — not a matter of public concern.