Mysterious disappearance: 40-year-old Diana Krebs from Berlin missing!

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Police are looking for the missing Diana Krebs (40) from Berlin in Heringsdorf. Information about whereabouts has been received.

Polizei sucht nach der vermissten Diana Krebs (40) aus Berlin in Heringsdorf. Hinweise zum Aufenthaltsort eingegangen.
Police are looking for the missing Diana Krebs (40) from Berlin in Heringsdorf. Information about whereabouts has been received.

Mysterious disappearance: 40-year-old Diana Krebs from Berlin missing!

On June 15, 2025, the police authority in Neubrandenburg withdrew a missing person report for a 40-year-old woman from Berlin, named Diana Krebs. She has been missing since June 14, 2025, around 10:45 a.m. The original location was within the jurisdiction of the Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania State Police, but according to information from news.de and presseportal.de has received information about her whereabouts since this morning, which indicates that her whereabouts are now outside of this jurisdiction.

The latest information suggests that the search for Diana Krebs has now been discontinued as the relevant authorities have been informed of these new findings. First Police Chief Inspector Jens Unmack, the police leader from the operations control center in Neubrandenburg, confirmed this. The search measures in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania were therefore no longer considered necessary.

Missing persons cases and police work

In Germany, people are considered missing if they are inexplicably absent from their location and a threat to life or limb is suspected. This is a central point that the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) sets out in its guidelines. Adults are generally free to choose where they want to stay, so the police only investigate if there is an actual danger. The situation is different for children and young people: They are considered missing if they leave their circle of life and their whereabouts are unknown, whereby state care is often necessary, as the BKA explains [BKA](https://www.bka.de/DE/ UnserAufgabe/Ermittlungsunterstuetzung/BearbeitungVermisstenfaelle/arbeitungVermisstenfaelle.html).

In Germany, there are currently over 9,400 missing person cases registered in the police information system INPOL, and between 200 and 300 new searches are added every day. Over 80% of these cases resolve within a month; The risk of being missing for more than a year only affects around 3% of those affected. What is particularly exciting is the fact that the majority of missing people are male and that children and young people make up a large proportion of these numbers.

For example, in 2024, around 18,100 children were missing, and an impressive 96.7% of these cases were resolved by the end of the year. This shows that cooperation between local police authorities and the BKA plays a crucial role in quickly solving missing person cases, especially when there is acute danger.

The current developments surrounding Diana Krebs show how dynamic and complex the work of the police in missing person cases can be. The hope for a positive clarification remains for the time being, even if the search in this particular case has been discontinued.