This article is from the source 'independent' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/cologne-sex-attacks-charge-dismissed-judge-new-year-eve-sexual-assault-algerian-man-a7016936.html

The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Cologne sex attack charge against Algerian man dismissed by judge Cologne sex attack charge against Algerian man dismissed by judge
(35 minutes later)
A judge in Cologne has dismissed charges of sexual assault against an Algerian man in connection with the New Year attacks. A judge in Cologne has dismissed charges of sexual assault against an Algerian man in connection with the New Year attacks. 
Dr Frank Altpeter acquitted the unnamed 26-year-old as it "could not be proven" that he had taken part in the sexual assault. Dr Frank Altpeter acquitted the unnamed 26-year-old as it "could not be proven" that he had taken part in the sexual assault. 
He and another Algerian man had previously been given a six month suspended sentence after being convicted of theft over the incident at Cologne Central train station during the New Year's Eve celebrations. The victim in the case heard at the court on Friday could not be sure that the two men in the dock were the ones who attacked her, German media reports
The man and another Algerian, 23, were handed six-month suspended sentences over handling stolen goods - relating to the mobile phone of a victim which was found on them - and breaking into a car on a separate occasion.
A court spokesman told the BBC the men were currently in detention awaiting deportation from Germany.
It was the first case of sexual assault from New Year's Eve to come before the court. It was the first case of sexual assault from New Year's Eve to come before the court. 
Germany was shocked by the string of sexual assaults and robberies against over 1,000 women in the city.Germany was shocked by the string of sexual assaults and robberies against over 1,000 women in the city.
The victims reported gangs of men of "Arab and North African appearance" surrounding them before groping, assaulting and robbing them. The victims reported gangs of men of "Arab and North African appearance" surrounding them before groping, assaulting and robbing them. 
The incident provoked an intense backlash against German Chancellor Angela Merkel's open-door policy towards the Syrian refugees who were flooding over land borders and the Mediterrnean sea to escape the brutality of Isis and the Syrian civil war. The incident provoked an intense backlash against German Chancellor Angela Merkel's open-door policy towards the Syrian refugees who were flooding over land borders and the Mediterrnean sea to escape the brutality of Isis and the Syrian civil war. 
More follows... Far-right group Pegida staged a rally in Cologne calling for Germany to close its borders. 
A subsequent investigation found that of the 159 men arrested in connection with the allegations, although some were asylum seekers, only three people had recently arrived from war-torn regions of Syria and Iraq. 
The head of the police inquiry, Detective Superintendent Thomas Schulter said of the men being investigated in connection with the attacks, two-thirds were of Algerian or Moroccan origin.
Police were accused of attempting to cover up the attacks after initially reporting that the New Year's Eve celebrations had passed without much incident. 
The local police chief, Wolfgang Albers, was suspended over his handling of the incident in January but allegations surfaced in April that the police had been ordered to remove the word "rape" from their report by the interior ministry of the state government. 
Cologne newspaper Express published a letter supposedly from a policeman named Joachim H who was on duty that day and described his colleague getting an order to remove the word "vergewaltigung" - or "rape" - because it is the "wish of the state interior ministry".
Police ultimately refused the request but the allegations put more pressure on North Rhine-Westphalia interior minister, Ralf Jäger, over his handling of the crisis. 
He denied a cover-up but confirmed there had been "professional discussions" over the "classification" of the New Year's Eve assaults.