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Summary

A man is sentenced to 140 days of punishment at a rate of €15 each, for theft of food worth under €5. As a Bürgergeld recipient, €15/day is almost his entire daily income. The judge considers the harsh sentence to be necessary because the defendant had committed past offenses.

Commentary

This case is a near textbook example of how poverty is criminalized and how criminalization entrenches poverty. The judge sentences the man to a very high fine even though he relies on public benefits and is living at subsistence level. In addition, he is already financially burdened by previous fines. The judge does not question why the defendant might have such a large number of previous convictions and why the previous fines have not stopped him from committing further offenses.

The judge’s reasoning is particularly noteworthy. Although she implies that she finds herself in a dilemma arising from the reality of poverty and the state’s simultaneous demand for the protection of private property, she still blames the defendant for this (“You aren’t making it easy for me.”) and in the very next sentence distances herself rhetorically (“What can one do?”) from her own judgment.

Together with the previous fines, it will take the defendant at least 33 months to pay off all his fines. This is based on the court’s assumption that he can spend up to a third of his monthly public benefits on installments. In practice this means that for almost three years he will live way under subsistence level.

Report

The trial is held as a so-called fast-track proceeding (beschleunigtes Verfahren) and only takes five minutes. Following the announcement of the verdict, the judge also urges that the next hearing be held quickly. The defendant is not represented by a lawyer and admits to the offense. He faces down during the entire trial and does not make use of his right to explain himself and his situation in a plea.

He is a middle-aged white man with German citizenship and has an adult child. He receives public benefits (Bürgergeld) and is accused of attempting to steal food worth under €5 from a supermarket. The food was returned to the store after he was caught. The judge describes the incident as part of a series of other thefts and fare evasion over a period of almost 30 years. The man has recently been fined twice for fare evasion, for a total of over €2,000.

The prosecutor admits that the theft was for a small amount and says that the defendant’s confession speaks for him but that the previous convictions speak against him. The prosecutor then demands a very high sentence of 140 days of punishment at €15/day.

The judge follows the prosecutor’s request and sentences the man to a total fine of €2,100. She begins her reasoning by emphasizing the man’s personal responsibility: “You aren’t making it easy. What can one do?” She also mentions the low value of the food, but above all stresses the man’s previous convictions. She justifies the high number of days by stating that, in view of the previous fines imposed, she has no choice but to make the current sentence even more severe.

Cases from our archive

Case 28

A woman is sentenced to probation by summary proceeding, which a court-appointed attorney appealed. At trial, her lawyer is not present and she has to navigate her case without proper interpretation. The judge urges her to revoke the appeal, arguing that she has already received a lenient punishment for possession of a weapon banned in Germany. She judges her harshly based on her association with “the wrong crowd” and urges her to set a better example for her child.

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Case 27

Shortly after a wave of populist outrage over a knife attack, a man convicted of attempted assault with a weapon based on little evidence appeals his sentence. At the appeal hearing, the environment is hostile, with the recent knife panic in the air: the defense is hindered from questioning witnesses while the judge and prosecutor cherry-pick testimony in an effort to justify continuing to jail the defendant pretrial, which would also facilitate his deportation. Even after a second appeal hearing does not reveal evidence sufficient to convict, the judge and prosecution insist on a high prison sentence, just two months short of his original one. The defendant is released after the second hearing because he has already served his sentence in pretrial detention.

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Case 26

A young man is on trial for theft. During his trial, he is informed that his sentence will be high because he had a knife at the time, though the evidence does not show that it was used during the offense. The judge threatens the defendant with jail time. Without a lawyer to consult, he appears to have little choice but to accept the harsh sentence and put up with the judge’s insinuations that he steals for the purpose of reselling – just like unnamed “others” the judge refers to.

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Case 25

Without a defendant or a lawyer present, the court issues a summary proceedings order, sentencing someone by mail for theft. The prosecution pushes for a harsh punishment and for retaining the charge “theft with a weapon” despite limited evidence of a weapon being present and without obtaining more evidence. Though the judge disagrees with the prosecution's original recommendation for a prison sentence, they sentence the defendant to a high fine of more than 1,300 Euros for stealing food.

Knife Panic
Criminalizing Poverty
Fine
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