Synagogue shooter’s father: He ‘wasn’t at peace with himself or the world’
Stephan Balliet's father says his son 'always blamed others'; an ex-soldier, he dropped out of college, worked as a broadcast technician
FRANKFURT AM MAIN, Germany (AFP) — The German suspect in a deadly anti-Semitic attack targeting a synagogue and a kebab shop in the east of the country has been described by his father as someone who “wasn’t at peace with himself or the world.”
Stephan Balliet, 27, was captured by police on Wednesday after he shot dead two people in a gun rampage in the city of Halle.
“The boy was only ever online,” spending many hours at the monitor and with few friends, his father, who was not named, was quoted as saying by Bild newspaper.
He had lived with his mother since his parents divorced when he was aged 14, the paper said.
While Balliet finished school, he had to break off chemistry studies at university after a serious stomach operation, it reported.
He also served in the Bundeswehr (German army), and several people who saw him during the attack said he looked “professional” or trained in weapons use.
Federal prosecutors have taken on the investigation after the attack was labeled an especially serious crime.
They told the DPA news agency on Thursday they had secured evidence in a search of the shooter’s home in the small village of Benndorf, some 40 kilometers (25 miles) west of Halle, or around 200 kilometers southwest of Berlin.
A neighbor told Bild that Balliet worked as a broadcast technician.
His father, who still regularly saw his son, told Bild: “We fought very often, my opinion counted for nothing. I can’t reach him any more.”
Balliet “wasn’t at peace with himself or the world, he always blamed others,” he added.
‘Total loser’
Throughout a video the shooter made of his actions using a helmet-mounted smartphone, his rage bubbles to the surface.
In the earliest minutes he berates his laptop as it takes too long to load programs and find a wireless signal, while later he curses as his homemade weapons fail to fire.
Unable to breach the entrance of the Jewish cemetery outside the synagogue, he shoots a passing woman, later firing another burst into her lifeless body and shouting “Pig!”
But he reserves his harshest language for himself, calling himself a “fucking idiot,” a “failure” and a “loser.”
Bleeding after a gunfight with police as he flees town in his crippled vehicle, he apologizes to the imagined audience watching online.
“That was it guys. A total loser,” he says into the lens before hurling the phone out of the car.
Around 2,200 people are believed to have watched his blundering, violent rampage on games streaming platform Twitch, the Amazon-owned company said — five of them live.
‘Global radical right’
Balliet’s repeated addresses to watching “guys” — and invitation to “be my friend” at the end of a political diatribe against Jews at the start of the video — point to a self-identification with a wider movement, extremism researcher Matthias Quent told DPA.
The use of English and transmission of conspiracy theories targeted at Jews and feminism “are themes of the global radical and populist right,” Quent said.
It was “significant” that he had written and published a “manifesto” in English, tweeted Peter Neumann, a terrorism expert at King’s College London.
The choice “clearly shows that he wasn’t trying to impress local neo-Nazis, but that his ‘audience’ was on message forums” online that have previously cheered on far-right killers.
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