Power Imbalance — Documented

Schork vs. Zirngast: How a Landlord's Law Firm Contradicts Its Own Evidence

What happens when a state-owned housing company sends a criminal defense firm against a single tenant in an asbestos case? 12 disputed points, documented from court files. A case study in institutional power vs. individual rights.

In 2012, a tenant moves into an apartment with degewo — one of Germany's largest housing companies. He receives permission for a renovation. What the tenant doesn't know: The apartment is fitted with asbestos-containing floor coverings. degewo has known this since 2000. In a parliamentary inquiry to the Berlin House of Representatives (14/219), it is later revealed that 14,400 apartments are affected.

The tenant removes the floor plates without protective equipment. The remaining adhesive is ground from the screed with a concrete grinder — without any protective measures. According to specialist literature, such grinding work releases approximately 1.2 to 1.5 million asbestos fibers per cubic meter of room air (Bossemeyer et al., ZUKUNFT Bauen 2015; Hiltpold, Forum Asbest 2014). This is many times the limit values. Only 6.5 years later, in November 2018, does degewo confirm in writing: Asbestos.

The tenant is represented by attorney Tim Zirngast. degewo deploys against him the law firm Eisenberg König Schork Kempgens (EKSK) — one of the most expensive crisis law firms in Germany. Dr. Stefanie Schork personally leads the defense. In a 10-page legal brief of June 27, 2019, she presents a narrative that is contradicted by her own exhibits.

What happens when a state-owned enterprise deploys one of Germany's most expensive crisis law firms against a single tenant — financed from public funds? The tenant is denied legal aid (PKH).

See also: The Criminal Case documents how the justice system dropped the investigation despite police confirming maximum health hazard.

Chronology of the Proceedings

From the draft complaint to final rejection — one year of legal combat in which an asbestos-injured tenant is systematically prevented from accessing the courts.

Feb 20, 2019

Lawsuit filed

Attorney Tim Zirngast files lawsuit at AG Wedding: €8,680.56 rent reduction (20% × 7 years). Reasoning: degewo knew of asbestos contamination since 2000, informed the tenant only in 2018 — 6.5 years after uncontrolled exposure. Lease start: 01.02.2012, warm rent: €516.72.

Source: Complaint by RA Zirngast, Az. 14 C 250/19

Apr 12, 2019

Case number assigned

AG Wedding registers the lawsuit under Az. 14 C 250/19. The file goes to the civil division.

Source: AG Wedding, Az. 14 C 250/19

Jun 27, 2019

Schork's legal brief — 10 pages + 5 exhibits

Dr. Stefanie Schork files a 10-page legal brief with exhibits B1–B5. The brief contains numerous false claims — and refutes itself: Exhibit B3 is degewo's own asbestos letter from 2013, which proves that degewo knew of asbestos contamination in this exact building. Schork claims nonetheless that degewo had no knowledge. Additionally, Schork raises counterclaims totaling €3,839.53 and threatens the tenant with § 303 StGB (property damage) and § 201 StGB (recording of conversation).

Source: Legal brief by Dr. Schork, 27.06.2019, Az. 14 C 250/19

Aug 19, 2019

Zirngast's response

RA Zirngast presents: Chrysotile asbestos in black adhesive confirmed, four witnesses named for damaged plates at move-in, expert opinion Wachotsch (Exhibit A7) and photographic documentation (Exhibit A8).

Source: Response by RA Zirngast, 19.08.2019, Az. 14 C 250/19

Dec 20, 2019

Legal aid rejected — Judge Heinau

Judge Heinau at AG Wedding rejects legal aid. Reasoning: Plates were undamaged, room air measurement negative, tenant violated agreement. The higher court case law of LG Berlin (18 S 140/16 and 66 S 212/18) is ignored. Claims by degewo are adopted as undisputed.

Source: Legal aid decision AG Wedding, 20.12.2019, Az. 14 C 250/19

Jan 8, 2020

Appeal filed

RA Zirngast files immediate appeal. He systematically refutes the legal aid decision: (1) The decision adopts degewo claims as undisputed, which the plaintiff explicitly disputed, (2) Section 4 of the agreement protects only pipes, not the floor, (3) Section 7 expressly expects construction debris, (4) LG Berlin ruled room air measurements irrelevant.

Source: Appeal brief by RA Zirngast, 08.01.2020, Az. 14 C 250/19

Jan 10, 2020

No relief granted — AG Wedding

AG Wedding denies relief of the appeal and forwards it to LG Berlin. The reasoning is not revised.

Source: Decision denying relief AG Wedding, 10.01.2020

Jan 30, 2020

LG Berlin rejects — Judge Bock

LG Berlin (Az. 63 T 13/20, Judge Bock) dismisses the appeal. Reasoning: The tenant demonstrated only an "abstract danger," not the "concrete" health hazard required by the BGH (VIII ZR 271/17). Result: The path to justice is finally closed. degewo has achieved its goal.

Source: Decision by LG Berlin, 30.01.2020, Az. 63 T 13/20

12 Points of Dispute — Point by Point Refuted

Each point of dispute documents exactly what Dr. Schork claims — and what the files actually show. Source citations refer to court file Az. 14 C 250/19 and exhibits B1–B5 from Schork's own legal brief of June 27, 2019.

Point of Dispute 01

Landlord's Duty to Inform

degewo claims to have provided a brochure titled "Your degewo Apartment" in 2012. Additionally, a letter titled "Important Tenant Information Asbestos" was allegedly sent to all 80,000 tenants in 2013. This should be sufficient to fulfill the duty to inform.

"In 2013, a letter was sent to all tenants. Additionally, a brochure was provided in 2012."

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019, EKSK

degewo knew of asbestos contamination as documented since 2000. This is proven in parliamentary inquiry 14/219: 14,400 apartments affected. Frank Bielka — then State Secretary, later degewo board member — answered this inquiry personally. The legal duty to inform existed since the asbestos ban of 1993 (GefStoffV). The Berlin Regional Court ruled in decision 18 S 140/16: Landlords must inform tenants of known asbestos contamination.

No proof of delivery exists. Even if sent: The 2013 letter arrived one year after the 2012 renovation. The tenant had already removed the plates. Only from 2021 did degewo first warn new tenants of asbestos danger — 28 years after the asbestos ban of 1993 (Tagesspiegel).

Decisive: Exhibit B3, which Schork herself submits to the court, is precisely this letter — "Important Tenant Information Asbestos" from 25.04.2013. It explicitly warns of "asbestos-containing wall and floor tiles." This proves that degewo knew of asbestos contamination in this exact building (Graunstraße 7). Yet Schork simultaneously claims degewo had no specific knowledge (→ Point of Dispute 11).

Assessment: No proof of delivery. The brochure was allegedly provided in 2012 — but the tenant moved in on 01.02.2012 and immediately began the approved renovation. The brochure would have had to be there on day one. Then the question arises: Why does degewo approve a renovation while simultaneously distributing a warning about asbestos? Either degewo knew of the danger — then it shouldn't have approved the renovation. Or it didn't know — then the claimed brochure is worthless. Both scenarios burden degewo.

Point of Dispute 02

Renovation Permission for an Asbestos Apartment

The permission concerned only laying coverings "on existing covering" — "floating, preferably unglued with click connection" (Exhibit B2, Section 3). Removal of the existing asbestos plates occurred "without authorization" and thus was not covered by the permission.

"The permission allowed only laying 'on existing covering'. The removal of the plates occurred without authorization."

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019, Exhibit B2 Section 3

First — The exhibits contradict themselves: The handwritten renovation application by the tenant (Exhibit B1, submitted by Schork herself) shows in black and white: "LAY PARQUET IN LIVING AND BEDROOM (GLUED)". The tenant clearly stated he intended to glue the parquet. You cannot glue parquet onto old laminate — removing the existing covering was the logical and technically necessary consequence. degewo approved this application.

Second — Verbal approval: The tenant also discussed the planned gluing verbally with the responsible degewo employee (Ms. G.). According to Ms. G., degewo could not approve gluing in writing, but if the apartment were improved and a successor accepted the changes, there would be no objections. The same assurance was repeated at apartment handover. degewo knew exactly what was planned — and had no objections because the measure represented a significant improvement. Nevertheless, the later written agreement (Exhibit B2) stated differently: "floating, preferably unglued with click connection."

Third — The permission itself was grossly negligent: degewo built the apartment complex itself. It knew from the start that asbestos had been installed. By 2000 at the latest, this knowledge was documented again when Frank Bielka — then State Secretary, later degewo board member — answered parliamentary inquiry 14/219 and confirmed 14,400 affected apartments. A renovation permission for a known asbestos apartment should never have been issued.

Fourth — Expert opinion confirms: An expert opinion by Ökoexpert GmbH establishes a covering prohibition for asbestos plates. The permission to "lay covering on existing covering" was therefore illegal even by degewo's own account.

Assessment: Schork's argument fails fourfold: (1) The application B1 says "GLUED," not "floating," (2) a verbal permission was granted, (3) the tenant didn't know asbestos plates were beneath the laminate, and (4) the permission was illegal anyway due to the covering prohibition. That Schork submits Exhibit B1 herself and its content contradicts her own argument reveals the quality of the brief.

Point of Dispute 03

The Agreement — Sections 4 and 7

The tenant violated the "Agreement for Structural Modifications" (Exhibit B2). This permitted only laying "on existing covering" (Section 3). Removal of existing asbestos plates was "unauthorized" and thus not covered by the agreement.

"The tenant violated the agreement. The agreement allowed only laying on existing covering."

Source — Dr. Schork / AG Wedding, Legal aid decision of 20.12.2019

Section 4 of the agreement (Exhibit B2) warns the tenant exclusively against pipes in walls and ceilings: electrical lines, heating pipes, water pipes. No word about asbestos. No mention of hazardous substances in the floor. No indication that dangerous materials lurk beneath the laminate. RA Zirngast argues in the appeal: The duty to warn should have covered the actual known danger — asbestos.

Section 7 of the agreement addresses removal and disposal obligations. It requires the tenant to "dispose of construction debris at own cost." Whoever expects "construction debris," expects demolition work — not merely laying a floating floor. The agreement itself presupposes that material will be removed.

Assessment: The agreement contradicts itself: Section 3 speaks of "laying on existing covering," Section 7 expects "construction debris." Section 4 warns against pipes but conceals asbestos — even though degewo knew of asbestos contamination. Whoever cites the agreement as evidence against the tenant must also explain the contradictions within the agreement.

Point of Dispute 04

Condition of Plates at Handover

The apartment was provided with intact, undamaged laminate flooring. The apartment handover protocol (Exhibit B4) documents the condition. AG Wedding stated in its reasoning that the apartment was "with continuous laminate flooring, as agreed by both parties."

"The apartment was provided with continuous laminate flooring. The plates were undamaged."

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019 / AG Wedding

The condition of the asbestos plates at handover was not intact. In the built-in cupboard were broken Floor-Flex plates with extensive cracks. Under the wall structure in the living room were plates visible not covered by laminate. Neither the built-in cupboards nor the wall structure are mentioned in the handover protocol (Exhibit B4) — the protocol merely lists the floor covering as "Flex..." without documenting the actual condition.

There are four witnesses who can confirm the damaged condition of the plates. RA Zirngast documented this in his brief of 19.08.2019, offering proof (Exhibit A8: photographic documentation).

Assessment: AG Wedding adopts Schork's claim as "agreed statement of facts," even though the plaintiff explicitly stated the opposite and offered witnesses. The legal aid decision ignores the specific allegation of damaged plates in the cupboard and under the wall structure. Evidence-taking should have occurred in a main proceeding — exactly what the denial of legal aid prevents.

Point of Dispute 05

§ 303 StGB — Property Damage Accusation

Dr. Schork characterizes the renovation conducted by the tenant as "property damage" under § 303 StGB. Removal of old tiles and floor coverings constituted criminal destruction of degewo's property.

The renovation constitutes "property damage under § 303 StGB."

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019

Exhibit B1 (submitted by Schork herself) shows the tenant's handwritten renovation application. It clearly states: "BATHROOM RENEW (REMOVE OLD TILES)". degewo approved this application. Removing old tiles was thus explicitly requested and approved.

Exhibit B2, Section 7 expects "construction debris" — demolition work was thus contemplated. Whoever approves a renovation that generates construction debris and involves removing old tiles cannot subsequently claim it was "property damage."

Assessment: The property damage accusation is refuted by Schork's own exhibits. B1 shows the approval for removal, B2 expects construction debris. The § 303 accusation is an intimidation tactic: The victim of asbestos exposure is threatened with criminal liability because he performed the renovation that degewo itself approved.

Point of Dispute 06

Room Air Measurement and Health Hazard

Dr. Schork portrays health hazard as mere "speculation into the blue." The district court relied on the fact that the room air sample "detected no asbestos contamination" — thus no health hazard could be proven.

Health hazard is "speculation into the blue." The room air measurement showed no contamination.

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019 / AG Wedding

Room air measurements are not decisive for asbestos assessment according to Berlin Regional Court case law (66 S 212/18). Even a single fiber can cause cancer. EU Directive 1999/77/EG is unambiguous:

"To date, no threshold has been identified below which chrysotile asbestos does not carry a cancer risk."

Source — EU Directive 1999/77/EG

The measurement was performed only in March 2019 — three months after the tenant moved out, in an empty, ventilated apartment. No evidentiary value regarding actual exposure in 2012. The expert opinion Wachotsch (Exhibit A7 of the plaintiff's side) confirms the concrete health hazard from grinding work.

Assessment: Calling a documented asbestos exposure during grinding work (approx. 1.2–1.5 million fibers/m³) "speculation into the blue" is cynical. The time-delayed room air measurement has no evidentiary value. AG Wedding's argument contradicts the higher court case law of LG Berlin.

Point of Dispute 07

Tenant Obligations and Reporting Duty

The tenant should have reported damage to the laminate or condition defects upon discovery (§ 536c BGB) to fulfill his reporting obligation.

"The tenant should have reported damage to the laminate."

Source — Dr. Schork / AG Wedding, Legal aid decision of 20.12.2019

The argument is a classic circular reasoning: degewo doesn't inform about asbestos, therefore the tenant cannot recognize asbestos, whereupon degewo accuses the tenant of not reporting it. In fact, the tenant performed improvement measures — there was no damage to report, only a planned renovation.

How impossible recognition was: The tenant — himself from the parquet flooring industry — consulted a certified flooring expert in 2018 and sent him photos of the exposed tiles and the black adhesive underneath. The expert would not have suspected asbestos. If not even a flooring specialist can identify asbestos from photographs, the expectation that a tenant should have recognized and reported it during renovation is absurd. Asbestos is not visible to the naked eye — this is confirmed by all specialist literature.

Assessment: The question is not why the tenant didn't report. The question is why degewo issued a renovation permit for an apartment it built itself and whose asbestos contamination has been documented since 2000. The duty to inform rests with the landlord, not the tenant. § 536c BGB presupposes that the tenant can recognize the defect. That was physically impossible.

Point of Dispute 08

"Asbestos Card" — Discrediting the Tenant

Dr. Stefanie Schork accused the tenant of "playing the asbestos card." This phrasing attempts to discredit a tenant's legitimate concern about being exposed to asbestos without protective equipment as a tactical maneuver.

The tenant "plays the asbestos card" — his concern is a tactical maneuver.

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019

During grinding work on asbestos adhesive, according to specialist literature, exposure is approximately 1.2 to 1.5 million fibers per cubic meter (Bossemeyer et al. 2015; Hiltpold 2014). The tenant was unable to work for one year and underwent psychological treatment. EU Directive 1999/77/EG confirms: No safe threshold exists. The "card" is not a tactic but a documented health hazard.

Assessment: The phrase "asbestos card" is classic victim blaming. A person who, through degewo's gross negligence, inhaled a substantial quantity of asbestos fibers — and who must live for the next 20 to 30 years knowing of the risk of asbestos-related disease — is accused of lacking integrity. Over a rent reduction lawsuit. The firm executes what the client instructs. But the tone of such a brief is carried by the client — and the client is a state-owned enterprise.

Point of Dispute 09

Recording of Conversation and § 201 StGB

Dr. Schork claimed the tenant boasted of recording conversations. Furthermore, Schork threatens prosecution under § 201 StGB — for criminal violation of confidentiality of the word.

The tenant "boasted of recording conversations." Threat of prosecution under § 201 StGB.

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019

Documentation of conversations — including audio recording — serves evidence preservation. The tenant had every reason to document conversations after degewo concealed asbestos contamination for 6.5 years. The threat under § 201 StGB is a deliberate intimidation tactic: Instead of discussing the content of conversations, the tenant is threatened with criminal prosecution.

Assessment: The accusation diverts from the actual issue. The problem isn't documentation of conversations but their content — namely years of concealment of a health hazard. The § 201 threat joins the pattern of the brief: § 303 (property damage), § 201 (recording), counterclaims — all intimidation instruments against an asbestos-injured tenant.

Point of Dispute 10

Counterclaims: €3,839.53 Against the Victim

Dr. Schork raises counterclaims on behalf of degewo totaling €3,839.53. The reasoning: damages for the renovation, which degewo classifies as "property damage."

degewo raises counterclaims totaling €3,839.53 against the tenant.

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019

The tenant sued for €8,680.56 — over 6.5 years of concealed asbestos contamination. Schork responds with counterclaims of €3,839.53, nearly half the claim. The message: Sue degewo and you risk paying yourself.

This tactic is especially effective in legal aid proceedings: A tenant unable to afford court costs and requiring legal aid is pressured with financial counterclaims.

Assessment: The counterclaims are part of strategic intimidation. Together with threats of § 303 StGB (property damage) and § 201 StGB (recording), the picture emerges: EKSK law firm uses every available lever to pressure the claimant financially, criminally, and psychologically. Financed from public funds, against a single tenant.

Point of Dispute 11

Exhibit B3 — degewo's Own Letter Contradicts Schork

Dr. Schork argues in her brief that degewo had no specific knowledge of asbestos contamination in this particular apartment. Knowledge of contamination was at most abstract.

degewo had no specific knowledge of asbestos contamination in this apartment.

Source — Dr. Schork, Legal brief of 27.06.2019

Schork refutes herself. As Exhibit B3, she submits the letter "Important Tenant Information Asbestos" from degewo dated April 25, 2013, addressed to tenants at Graunstraße 7 — the exact building in question. The letter explicitly warns of "asbestos-containing wall and floor tiles" and provides specific instructions.

This means: degewo knew building-specifically that Graunstraße 7 contained asbestos tiles. The lawyer for degewo provides with her own exhibit the proof for exactly what she denies. And even this letter came too late: It is dated April 2013 — the tenant moved in February 2012 and had already completed the renovation by then. But degewo knew long before 2013: You don't send such a letter without knowing asbestos is present. Parliamentary inquiry 14/219 from 2000 documents this knowledge.

Assessment: This is the gravest self-contradiction of the entire brief. Exhibit B3 proves building-specific knowledge. Schork denies building-specific knowledge. Both in the same submission. And by degewo's own documentation, this knowledge came one year after the tenant's asbestos exposure.

Point of Dispute 12

Legal Aid Denial as Strategic Barrier

AG Wedding (Judge Heinau, 20.12.2019) denied legal aid. LG Berlin (Judge Bock, 30.01.2020, Az. 63 T 13/20) upheld the denial. Reasoning: The claim lacks reasonable prospect of success, health hazard is only "abstract," room air measurement was negative.

Source — AG Wedding, Legal aid decision of 20.12.2019; LG Berlin, Decision of 30.01.2020

The legal aid decision of AG Wedding contains substantial deficiencies: (1) It treats degewo claims as undisputed despite being explicitly contested by the plaintiff — particularly the condition of plates at handover, (2) it ignores witness evidence (four witnesses), (3) it relies on a room air measurement which LG Berlin 66 S 212/18 ruled irrelevant, and (4) it ignores contradictions within the agreement (Section 3 vs. Section 7).

LG Berlin requires proof of "concrete" health hazard (BGH VIII ZR 271/17). But precisely this proof — through expert opinion, witness testimony, and medical documentation — can only be presented in a main proceeding. The legal aid denial prevents the main proceeding. A perfect circle: No proof without proceeding, no proceeding without proof.

RA Zirngast in the appeal (08.01.2020): The decision treats Schork's claims as facts, ignores LG case law on room air measurements, and misunderstands that Section 4 of the agreement warns only of pipes — not asbestos. Section 7 expects construction debris, which presupposes demolition work.

Assessment: The legal aid denial is the decisive lever. Without legal aid, the tenant cannot afford the litigation. Result: A state-owned enterprise, financing one of Germany's most expensive crisis law firms from public funds, blocks an asbestos-injured tenant from access to justice — because he cannot afford court costs. Legal aid exists to balance exactly this asymmetry. Here it failed.

Overview of the 12 Points of Dispute

No. Point of Dispute Schork / degewo claims What the files show
1 Duty to Inform Brochure 2012 and letter 2013 sent. No proof of delivery. Letter arrived after exposure. Exhibit B3 proves building-specific knowledge.
2 Renovation Permission Only "floating on existing covering." Removal unauthorized. Exhibit B1 shows "PARQUET GLUED." Verbal approval granted. Covering prohibition confirms illegality.
3 Agreement Sections 4 & 7 Tenant violated agreement. Section 4 warns only of pipes, not asbestos. Section 7 expects "construction debris" — presupposes demolition.
4 Plate Condition Plates throughout laminate covered, undamaged. Cracks in cupboard, damage under wall structure. Four witnesses. Protocol incomplete.
5 § 303 — Property Damage Renovation is property damage under § 303 StGB. Exhibit B1: "REMOVE OLD TILES" was requested and approved. B2 Section 7 expects construction debris.
6 Room Air Measurement Health hazard is "speculation." Measurement negative. LG Berlin: Room air measurement irrelevant. Measurement 3 months after move-out. No safe threshold (EU Dir.).
7 Tenant Obligations Tenant should have reported damage (§ 536c BGB). Circular reasoning. Even a certified flooring expert wouldn't have suspected asbestos. Recognition physically impossible.
8 "Asbestos Card" Tenant "plays the asbestos card" as tactic. 1.2–1.5 million fibers/m³ from grinding work. Classic victim blaming.
9 Recording / § 201 Tenant "boasted" of recordings. Threat with § 201 StGB. Evidence preservation after 6.5 years of concealment. Intimidation tactic.
10 Counterclaims €3,839 Damages for alleged property damage. Intimidation in legal aid context. Victim should pay for approved renovation.
11 Exhibit B3 — Self-Contradiction No specific knowledge of asbestos in this apartment. Exhibit B3 (own submission!) is degewo's asbestos letter to Graunstr. 7 from 25.04.2013.
12 Legal Aid Denial Claim lacks reasonable prospect of success. Decision ignores LG case law, treats Schork claims as facts. Access to courts blocked.

Pattern of the Brief

The 10-page legal brief by Dr. Schork from June 27, 2019 follows a clear scheme: (1) False claims — denying facts refuted by her own exhibits (B1 vs. "floating," B3 vs. "no knowledge"). (2) Intimidation — threats of § 303 StGB, § 201 StGB, and counterclaims of €3,839.53. (3) Victim blaming — the asbestos-injured tenant is portrayed as perpetrator who "plays the asbestos card" and committed crimes. This scheme is typical of crisis communication — not of honest legal argument.

Criminal Complaint under § 229 and § 326 StGB

Criminal Complaint from May 18, 2021

Case number: 281 UJs 699/21

Filed at Berlin Regional Court. The tenant filed criminal complaint against degewo for negligent bodily injury and environmental crime.

§ 229 StGB — Negligent Bodily Injury

Whoever negligently injures another's health is punished by imprisonment up to three years or fine. Failure to warn of asbestos contamination meets these elements.

§ 326 StGB — Environmental Crime (Official Crime)

§ 326 is an official crime — meaning the prosecutor is not dependent on private complaint. She must investigate ex officio when public interest is evident. With originally 17,000, currently 6,736 affected degewo apartments (Drs. 19/23 946 (German)), it is.

Regional Police Office LKA 336 (Environmental Crimes) investigated for three months. Chief Inspector Tomalla documented in her final report the "worst-case scenario." Six weeks later, Prosecutor Falkenstein closed the case — with a one-sided decision. The General Prosecutor's Office confirmed. Three levels of court, zero consequences.

"That's a scandal, what degewo is getting away with."

— Chief Inspector Tomalla, LKA 336, during witness examination

Complete analysis of the criminal case →
Timeline, 7 contradictions between court justification and file evidence, actors and relevant legal provisions.

The EKSK Law Firm — Strategic Dimension

Eisenberg König Schork Kempgens Partnership for Attorneys is one of Germany's most expensive crisis law firms. The three partners have connections far beyond traditional landlord-tenant law.

Johannes "Jony" Eisenberg

Born 1955. Co-founder and general counsel of taz (die tageszeitung). One of Berlin's most prominent attorneys. Notable clients: Ibiza-video scandal, BND affairs. Founder of project "Wrongful Conviction and Retrial" — assistance for the wrongly convicted.

Prof. Dr. Stefan König

Honorary professor at Georg-August University Göttingen. Specialist attorney for criminal law. Former chair of Criminal Law Committee of German Bar Association. Focus "Top Lawyer Germany" multiple times honored.

Dr. Stefanie Schork

Partner of the firm since 2009. Specialist attorney for criminal law, communications and crisis consultant. In this case leading degewo's defense. Accused the tenant of "playing the asbestos card." Schork is more crisis communications expert than landlord-tenant attorney.

Strategic Assessment

Crisis Management, Not Landlord-Tenant Law

EKSK is not primarily specialized in landlord-tenant law but crisis management. degewo uses the firm not to win legally but to control the dispute and influence the public.

Resource Asymmetry

The tenant is represented by an attorney with limited means. He is denied legal aid. degewo with EKSK has unlimited financial resources — all from public funds.

Image Contradiction

The same firm that fights for press freedom and civil rights — representing the Chaos Computer Club, ver.di, and the wrongly convicted — defends a state-owned enterprise concealing asbestos danger from its tenants.

Public Funds Against Citizens

Taxpayers fund not only degewo apartments but also the expensive law firm fighting a single tenant. This is structural injustice in the system.

Detailed profile of EKSK law firm (German)

Relevant Case Law

Duty to Inform

LG Berlin 18 S 140/16

Landlords must inform tenants of known asbestos contamination. Duty to inform is mandatory.

Full analysis (German)

Room Air Irrelevant

LG Berlin 66 S 212/18

Room air measurements are not decisive for assessing asbestos health hazard. Even minimal fibers are relevant.

Full analysis (German)

Concrete Hazard

BGH VIII ZR 271/17

Federal Court of Justice requires proof of "concrete" health hazard. LG Berlin uses this decision to dismiss the appeal — overlooking that proof can only be presented in a main proceeding.

Full analysis (German)

EU Law

EU Directive 1999/77/EG

Chrysotile asbestos: "No threshold has been identified below which cancer risk does not exist."

Full analysis (German)

Official Crime

§ 326 StGB — Official Crime

Environmental crimes are official crimes. Prosecutors must investigate ex officio when public interest is evident.

Full analysis (German)

Expert Opinion

Ökoexpert GmbH Report

Covering prohibition for asbestos plates. degewo's permission to cover was illegal even by its own logic.

To the report (German)

12 Points of Dispute. 12 Contradictions.

False claims refuted by their own exhibits. Intimidation through criminal threats and counterclaims. Victim blaming. A legal aid denial that blocks access to courts. All financed from public funds.