Arrest made in Bulgaria reporter's death

Germans holding 21-year-old; DNA said to link him to slaying, sexual assault

A woman leaves flowers Wednesday near the photo of Viktoria Marinova on the Liberty Monument in Ruse, Bulgaria. The television journalist was raped and strangled Saturday.
A woman leaves flowers Wednesday near the photo of Viktoria Marinova on the Liberty Monument in Ruse, Bulgaria. The television journalist was raped and strangled Saturday.

SOFIA, Bulgaria -- German police have arrested a suspect in the rape and killing of a television journalist from Bulgaria whose work highlighted corruption in the eastern European country, officials said Wednesday.

Bulgaria's prosecutor general, Sotir Tsatsarov, confirmed the arrest of Severin Krassimirov, a 21-year-old Bulgarian citizen.

Prosecutors in the northwestern German state of Lower Saxony said the suspect was arrested Tuesday evening outside the city of Hamburg on a European arrest warrant. Prosecutors will examine whether he can be extradited and apply to have him held in formal custody.

Bulgarian Interior Minister Mladen Marinov said investigators had found DNA evidence on the clothes and body of Viktoria Marinova, who was raped and strangled Saturday in the northern town of Ruse.

Authorities said that Marinova's funeral will be held Friday in the town. She is survived by a 7-year-old daughter.

Bulgarian media outlets reported that Krassimirov's mother lives in Germany. The Interior Ministry said that he left Bulgaria early Saturday afternoon, crossing the bridge at Ruse over the Danube into Romania.

"There is physical evidence to link to the murder," Marinov said. He said Krassimirov, a resident of Ruse, had a criminal record for scrap-metal theft.

The minister said investigators had spoken to Marinova's family and friends and "there is no apparent link to her work." Tsatsarov said the evidence suggested it was "a spontaneous attack, not premeditated."

However, he added that investigators were examining "all possible lines of investigation."

Prime Minister Boyko Borissov offered condolences to her family and thanked investigators for their work.

However, he said he would withdraw his support for a German member of the European Parliament, Manfred Weber, a leading candidate to become the next head of the European Commission, because of tweets he made associating the death of Marinova with those of Maltese journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia and Slovak journalist Jan Kuciak. Both were killed because of their investigations into corrupt officials.

On Wednesday, Weber tweeted: "Bulgarian authorities have acted swiftly and effectively. We have full confidence in the Bulgarian authorities to find justice for the family and loved ones."

Marinova hosted a show last month featuring two investigative journalists who were detained for their work on suspected fraud involving European Union funds.

While Marinova didn't appear to have been closely involved in the fraud investigation, her show touched on a sensitive subject in Bulgaria, where corruption is endemic. The Balkan nation, which joined the EU in 2007, was ranked 71st on Transparency International's corruption list last year.

Joining the bloc opened a source of possible new funding for Bulgarian infrastructure projects or other programs designed to bring the nation up to EU standards.

Information for this article was contributed by Teodora Barzakova, Alison Mutler and Geir Moulson of The Associated Press.

A Section on 10/11/2018

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