BREAKING: 20-Year-Old Woman on Trial for Killing 64-Year-Old Migrant Who Was Allegedly Raping Her – Here’s What We Know
By: Natalie Washington, International Correspondent
April 7, 2025
Kaiserslautern, Germany – A 20-year-old American woman, identified as Fallyn B., is on trial in Germany for the fatal stabbing of a 64-year-old Eritrean asylum seeker, Alem T., who allegedly sexually assaulted her at the Kaiserslautern main train station on June 29, 2024. The case, which has sparked outrage among conservatives in the U.S., centers on what Fallyn claims was self-defense—a claim German prosecutors partially acknowledge but are still pursuing as a murder charge, potentially carrying a 10-year sentence in youth court.
Fallyn, a civilian contractor at Ramstein Air Base, was on an escalator at the station when Alem T. allegedly groped her from behind, according to a Daily Wire report on April 3, 2025. A heated confrontation ensued, escalating into a physical struggle. Fallyn pulled a 7-centimeter jackknife to fend him off, intending to scare him, but when he grabbed her arm, she stabbed him once in the upper body. The blade pierced his aorta, killing him within seconds. Fallyn fled the scene by train, texting a friend, “I think I just killed someone,” before turning herself in to police hours later, as reported by American Renaissance on April 3.
German prosecutors concede the initial groping was a criminal act and, after reviewing CCTV footage, do not believe Fallyn intended to kill Alem T. However, they’ve charged her with intentional bodily harm resulting in death, arguing the fatal outcome wasn’t justified. “She allegedly wanted to injure the man, but not kill him,” a prosecutor told the Daily Mail on December 3, 2024. If convicted, Fallyn faces up to 10 years in prison, a sentence that has conservatives on X, like @JusticeForFallyn, fuming: “This is insane—defending yourself from a rapist gets you charged with murder in Germany?”
The trial has reignited debates over self-defense laws in Germany, where the legal threshold for proportional response is stricter than in many U.S. states. A 2019 DW article noted that German law requires the response to be “necessary and proportionate,” a standard some argue fails victims like Fallyn. Ramstein Air Base, where Fallyn worked, is part of the Kaiserslautern Military Community, home to over 54,000 American service members, according to a 2024 Wikipedia entry. Her case has drawn attention to the challenges faced by Americans navigating foreign legal systems, with @MAGAForce2024 writing on X, “German logic always confounds people—punish the victim, not the predator.”
Fallyn’s trial is a stark reminder of what they see as Europe’s failure to protect women from migrant crime. A 2023 Statista report showed a 15% rise in sexual assaults in Germany since 2015, often linked to migrant populations, fueling conservative calls for stricter immigration policies. As the trial unfolds, Fallyn’s fate hangs in the balance—and conservatives are rallying to her defense, demanding justice for a woman they believe was only protecting herself.

Natalie D. is an American conservative writer! Natalie has described herself as a polemicist who likes to “stir up the pot,” and does not “pretend to be impartial or balanced, as broadcasters do,” drawing criticism from the left, and sometimes from the right. As a passionate journalist, she works relentlessly to uncover the corruption happening in Washington.She is a “constitutional conservative”.