'Black Forest Rambo' arrested after five days on the run

German police searched for the man, who was armed with knives and pistols -  RONALD WITTEK/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
German police searched for the man, who was armed with knives and pistols - RONALD WITTEK/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

A man who disarmed four officers at gunpoint in southwestern Germany before fleeing into the Black Forest has been arrested after a five-day manhunt that involved more than 2,500 officers, police said on Friday.

Police, including special forces and a sniffer dog, moved in after two witnesses reported seeing a man who fitted the profile of suspect Yves Rausch on Friday afternoon, deputy regional police chief Jurgen Rieger said.

The suspect was found sitting in a bush with four handguns lying in front of him and a hatchet in his lap, as well as a document that officials have not yet evaluated but suspect was intended as a suicide note, Mr Rieger told reporters in Oppenauy.

Mr Rieger said efforts to talk to the suspect proved "somewhat difficult". Mr Rausch was slightly injured during the arrest, but not badly enough to be hospitalised, and a police officer suffered a superficial wound caused by the hatchet.

The four missing police weapons were recovered and an additional handgun found. The 31-year-old suspect, who could face charges of robbery by extortion, had yet to be questioned on Friday evening.

Police asked the public to stay indoors where possible while hunting for Mr Rausch
Police asked the public to stay indoors where possible while hunting for Mr Rausch

Last Sunday, police were alerted about a suspicious person carrying a bow and arrow. Officers located a suspect and conducted an ID check on the man at a hut he was using illegally.

Officials in Oppenau say the suspect initially cooperated but then suddenly pulled a gun on the officers, threatening and forcing them to hand over their service weapons. Nobody was injured. The incident triggered a large-scale manhunt.

"I am very relieved - I think a line can be drawn under a really extraordinary situation for our little town," Mayor Uwe Gaiser said.

Mr Rieger said the difficult, hilly terrain, with more than 14,000 acres of forest, posed a particular challenge to police, while it is believed that the suspect knew the area well.

"We were relatively sure, and it was only a matter of how long it would take, that we would come across him at some point," Mr Rieger said. He acknowledged "immense public pressure," and said that more than 2,530 officers were involved in the operation.

Prosecutors have described the suspect as a "weapons enthusiast" but said he was banned from possessing weapons and ammunition in 2010 and had never been in a shooting club.

Mr Rausch lost his apartment last autumn and had no permanent address since then, according to authorities. Officials have said they do not know what prompted Mr Rausch to act the way he did.

The fugitive has had run-ins with police before. He was given a three-and-a-half-year juvenile sentence in 2010 after shooting a crossbow at a woman and wounding her, according to prosecutors in nearby Pforzheim.