Overview
- A court-ordered auction of Melanie Müller’s former railway station property drew no offers, so the Leipzig district court paused the forced sale and the home stays in her name for now.
- Creditors can ask the court to restart the process within a six-month window, or they can agree to a private sale that would need their formal consent.
- An expert report put the property and 1,572 square meters of land at about €800,000, and bidders would have needed to start above roughly €400,000 to win the first round.
- Müller sought a private sale shortly before the auction, and local reporting says an offer of about €725,000 was filed in late April, which now requires review and sign-off by all parties.
- Court records describe steep financial strain after her January conviction for using unconstitutional symbols and drug possession, with few bookings, about €1,500 net monthly pay, and tax debts in the low six figures.