Greifswald District Court

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Greifswald District Court building

The Greifswald District Court is a court of the ordinary jurisdiction of the State of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in the district of the Stralsund Regional Court .

Seat and District of the Court

Jurisdiction of the district courts subordinate to the LG Stralsund until October 5, 2014
  • Ribnitz-Damgarten group
  • AG Stralsund
  • AG Bergen auf Rügen
  • AG Greifswald
  • AG Anklam
  • AG Wolgast
  • Judicial districts of the district courts subordinate to LG Stralsund from February 27, 2017
  • AG Stralsund
  • AG Greifswald
  • The seat of the court is the university and Hanseatic city of Greifswald .

    The judicial district comprised the following cities and municipalities until the judicial structural reform came into force on October 6, 2014.

    • Bandelin,
    • Behrenhoff,
    • Brünzow,
    • Dargelin,
    • Dersekow,
    • Diedrichshagen,
    • Greifswald,
    • Gribow,
    • Gross Kiesow,
    • Gützkow,
    • Hanshagen,
    • Hinrichshagen,
    • Karlsburg,
    • Katzow,
    • Kemnitz,
    • Levenhagen,
    • Loissin,
    • Lubmin,
    • Lühmannsdorf,
    • Mesekenhagen,
    • New Boltenhagen,
    • Neuenkirchen,
    • Rubenow,
    • Wackerow,
    • Weitenhagen,
    • Wrangelsburg,
    • Wusterhusen and
    • Züssow

    The following cities and municipalities , which previously belonged to the district of the Anklam District Court, were incorporated into the district of the Greifswald District Court .

    • Blesewitz,
    • Buggenhagen,
    • Butzow,
    • Dargen,
    • Garz,
    • Great Polzin,
    • Iven,
    • Comb teeth,
    • Klein Bünzow,
    • Korswandt,
    • Krien,
    • Krusenfelde,
    • Lassan,
    • Medow,
    • Murchin,
    • Neetzow-Liepen,
    • Neuenkirchen,
    • Postlow,
    • Rankwitz,
    • Rubkov,
    • Schmatzin,
    • Spantekow,
    • Stumble,
    • Stolpe on Usedom,
    • Usedom,
    • Ziethen and
    • Zirchow

    Furthermore, the following cities and municipalities were moved from the district of the Demmin District Court to the district of the Greifswald District Court.

    • Old Tellin,
    • Bentzin,
    • Daberkow,
    • Gormin,
    • Jarmen,
    • Kruckow,
    • Loitz,
    • Sassen-Trantow,
    • Tutow and
    • Völschow

    As a result of the dissolution of the Wolgast District Court , the judicial district of the Greifswald District Court expanded to include the following cities and communities on August 31, 2015.

    • Benz,
    • Heringsdorf,
    • Karlshagen,
    • Koserow,
    • Kröslin,
    • Crooked,
    • Loddin,
    • Luetow,
    • Mellenthin,
    • Mölschow,
    • Peenemünde,
    • Pudagla,
    • Sauzin,
    • Trassenheide,
    • Ückeritz,
    • Wolgast,
    • Zemitz,
    • Zempin and
    • Zinnowitz

    Thus the originally about 647 was  km 2 large jurisdiction by the court structure reform to approximately 2106 km 2 enlarged. About 153,000 people live in it.

    Since the abolition of the Wolgast District Court, the Greifswald District Court has been locally responsible for the municipality-free coastal waters off the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania in civil and criminal matters for the entire district of the Rostock Higher Regional Court and thus for the whole of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.

    building

    The "Culture House of the Railway Workers" in 1955

    The courthouse, originally built as a brine and mud bath , in GDR times the “cultural house of railway workers”, is located at Lange Straße 2a . The Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Finance Court was housed in the same building until September 2, 2014 .

    Superior courts

    The District Court of Stralsund is directly superior to the Greifswald District Court . The competent higher regional court is the higher regional court in Rostock .

    See also

    Web links

    Commons : Greifswald District Court  - collection of images, videos and audio files

    Individual evidence

    1. Section 4 (1) of the Court Structure Act in the version dated November 11, 2013, GVOBl. MV 1998, pp. 444, 549 .
    2. IV. B) of the Annex to Section 4 Paragraph 2 Sentence 1 of the Court Structure Act in the version dated November 11, 2013.
    3. a b c Information on the reform of the judicial structure. (No longer available online.) Ministry of Justice of the State of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , archived from the original on December 16, 2015 ; Retrieved November 5, 2015 .
    4. Information from the initiators of the referendum against the reform of the judicial structure ( Memento from August 30, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 417 kB), p. 7, accessed on August 31, 2015.
    5. Status: June 30, 2014, Statistical Report of the Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Statistical Office , accessed on September 14, 2015.
    6. § 9 b of the Act for the Implementation of the Court Structure Act of June 10, 1992, GVOBl. MV 1992, p. 314 .
    7. § 3 para. 2 p. 2 no. 4 lit. b of the Court Structure Act in the version dated November 11, 2013.

    Coordinates: 54 ° 5 ′ 46 ″  N , 13 ° 22 ′ 13.2 ″  E