Manfred Notzel

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Manfred Nötzel (born 1950 ) is a German lawyer . Since October 2015 he has been attorney general in Munich . In 2018 he retired and was replaced by Reinhard Röttle . Previously, Nötzel was the chief public prosecutor at the Munich General Public Prosecutor's Office and the Munich I Public Prosecutor's Office. During this time, he led the charges in the 2013 trial against Bernie Ecclestone , against Bernd Schottdorf (Schottdorf affair) and against managers of Bayern-LB and Deutsche Bank .

Life

He joined the judicial service at the Munich District Court on February 1, 1981. In the further course Nötzel worked for the public prosecutor and from 1985 as a civil judge. From May 1998 he headed the corruption department of the Munich I public prosecutor's office. In February 2003, he became the chief public prosecutor of this public prosecutor. From March 2009, Nötzel was again in charge of the Munich I Public Prosecutor's Office as Chief Public Prosecutor. On December 12, 2015, he was officially introduced as Attorney General at the Munich Attorney General and successor to Peter Frank . He held this post until his retirement in early 2018.

Known cases

In September 2014, the Munich I public prosecutor, under his leadership, brought charges against Clemens Börsig , Tessen von Heydebreck , Jürgen Fitschen , Rolf Breuer and Josef Ackermann in the trial following the Breuer interview .

In 2020 he began his work as a special investigator for the State Parliament of Saxony-Anhalt in the case of Oury Jalloh, who was burned in a police cell .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c bayern.de: Change of office at the head of the General Public Prosecutor's Office in Munich / Bavaria's Minister of Justice Bausback says goodbye to Manfred Nötzel and introduces Reinhard Röttle into the new office on February 19, 2018, accessed on August 11, 2020
  2. a b c dpa / AZ: Career jump at 65: This is the new Attorney General Manfred Nötzel. In: Abendzeitung-muenchen.de. December 12, 2015, accessed August 11, 2020 .
  3. mdr.de: Oury Jalloh: Report by special investigators should enable lessons from the "open wound" -. In: mdr.de. May 25, 2020, accessed June 24, 2020 .