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The controversy broke out in Germany as to whether the trans-extremist extremist should serve as a prison term in a female or male institution.
In July 2023, Marla-Svena Libich was sentenced by the Galle District Court in Saxon-Anhalt to only six months of imprisonment without parole for extreme incitement to hatred, slander and insult.
Libich addressed her sentence and lost.
At the time, she was called Sven Libic. German media reports say Libich was a member of the neo -Nazi group called Blood and Honor.
At the end of 2024, Libich had his own gender in official records from a man. She also changed her name.
The reason for this was the law on self -determination of Germany, which has just entered into force and strengthened the rights of transgenders. The law allows people to change their gender marker and the name through a simple declaration in the registers rather than a court order.
German media questioned whether Libic’s serious changes.
“Is the change seriously doubtful,” Der Spiegel wrote. “For many years, Libich has been known for his right extremist views and also made querfobic statements in the past.”
Libich has taken legal measures against the media for considering false ideas about his gender identity.
The complaint against the Spiegel to the press council was unanimously rejected by the Council as unreasonable. Spiegel said the letter said he was probably Libich “in a harsh way to change civil status to provoke and embarrass the state.”
Libich wants to start a prison sentence soon.
The chief prosecutor in Galle, Dennis Chernobyl, said the German public television company MDR in Saxony-Anhalta that Libic would serve as prison in the Chemnitz Women’s Prison.
Libich confirmed this in a message on X. “I will start my prison sentence,” she said. “On August 29, 2025, at 10 pm, I will come to the Chemnitz correctional facility with my suitcases.”
The decision on where to place Libich will be made at the beginning of imprisonment. The chief prosecutor said the prison administration would decide whether Libich could threaten safety and order, which could bring her translation to another prison.
Meanwhile, German media that Libic has recently lost another case against journalist Julian Reichelt in the Berlin Regional Court.
Reichelt, editor-in-chief of Nius, located on X in July: “Anyone who follows the reports on the neo-Nazi Libic can only come to one conclusion: the government’s government, by law, forcing almost all the German media landscape to tell unchecked and make grotes.”
Die Welt said the second Civil Court decided to dismiss Libic’s statement for a preliminary ban, saying she was unreasonable.