Does climate gluer Carla Hinrichs have to go to jail now?

By Birgit Buerkner

Just last week, climate chaos clerk Carla Hinrichs (26) was sentenced to a suspended prison sentence by a court. On Monday she was stuck on the city highway again. Are you going to jail now?

Demonstrators from the Last Generation group brought traffic to a standstill in 17 locations in Berlin from 7 a.m. on Monday morning. The prominent spokeswoman for the group, Carla Hinrichs, took part in the action on the A100 near Hohenzollerndamm.

The police at the climate adhesive blockade on the A100 in Berlin

The police at the climate adhesive blockade on the A100 in Berlin Photo: REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

On May 11, she had Knallhart judge Dr. Michael Demel was sentenced to two months’ probation and 60 hours’ work by the district court in Frankfurt/Main. The probationary period is three years.

Does Hinrichs have to move in now? “First of all, the judgment would have to become final,” says Sylvia Hauptmann, spokeswoman for the Frankfurt court. That would only be the case after a week, i.e. on May 18th, unless Hinrichs appealed or appealed.

“Then the district court responsible would have to finally condemn Tiergarten Hinrichs for the act on Hohenzollerndamm,” said Hauptmann.

Will Carla Hinrichs’ parole be revoked?

The Frankfurt judge who supervises probation would then have to deal with Hinrichs again and determine a probation violation. “In the worst case, she would be threatened with the revocation of the probation.” Then it could be that Hinrichs has to start her prison sentence.

She herself wrote on Twitter that she did not want to be deterred from her protest by court decisions.

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The blockades on Monday in Berlin

On Monday, two other troublemakers stuck to rental cars on Hohenzollerndamm that they had set up to stop traffic. The police first had to remove the tires from the vehicles to stop the action.

At the intersection of Danziger Strasse and Prenzlauer Allee, officials had to flex an adhesive out of the asphalt. A thirty by thirty centimeter hole was created in the roadway. According to their own statements, the chaotic people used a sand-adhesive mixture for their actions, so that it took a particularly long time to detach their glued hands from the asphalt.

A police spokeswoman was initially unable to say how many people were involved in the blockades. The traffic information center reported long traffic jams.

Around 1 p.m. the blockades were all removed:

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