Czech court sends fugitive trans neo-Nazi back to Germany

HomeUpdatesCzech court sends fugitive trans neo-Nazi back to Germany

Marla-Svenja Liebich was convicted of multiple offenses in ‘her’ home country, prompting a debate about professed gender and prison choice

A transgender neo-Nazi fugitive, convicted of multiple offenses, could be extradited to Germany, according to a ruling delivered by a regional court in the Czech Republic as cited by Reuters and Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The legal gender change of Marla-Svenja Liebich, formerly known as Sven Liebich, had previously sparked an uproar over prison placement in Germany.

In 2023, Liebich was convicted to 18 months in prison on multiple counts, including incitement to hatred, insult, trespass and defamation. The former member of the banned far-right group Blood and Honor appealed the sentence but lost.

In 2024, just weeks after Germany’s new Self-Determination Act came into force, Liebich legally changed gender and became officially recognized as a woman. Following the change, the convicted petitioned to serve the sentence in a women’s prison – a move that was approved by a court.

The ruling triggered a public debate, with some critics alleging tactical misuse of the law and warning of potential loopholes. German Interior Minister Aleksander Dobrindt has slammed the case as evidence of the law’s potential for abuse.

Liebich failed to report to the prison in August 2025 after fleeing the country. Earlier this year, the 56-year-old was apprehended by Czech police in the western town of Krasna, near the German border and put in pre-trial custody.

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Sven Liebich, July 2025.
German neo-Nazi changes gender to serve sentence in women’s prison – media

In December 2025, while still on the run, Liebich told Euronews that he had applied to change legal gender status again, saying that being a woman no longer felt right for him.

Commenting on the extradition ruling, spokesperson for the regional court in the western Czech city of Plzen told AFP that Liebich has three days to appeal it. If no appeal is filed within that period, the extradition order will become final and German authorities are expected to take custody within ten days.

During an initial hearing in the Czech city of Plzen on May 18, Liebich reportedly opposed extradition, arguing that it could result in placement in a men’s prison.

Liebich’s gender transition was widely regarded by commentators and critics as an attempt to mock the Self-Determination Act, introduced under the previous government. In 2022, he disrupted an LGBTQ Pride parade in the eastern German city of Halle, where activists said participants were called “parasites on society.”

June 3, 2026 at 06:54PM
RT

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