The driver was a 24-year-old Afghan national Farhad Noori, born in
Kabul in January 2001, as one of seven children to a
Tajik family. He attended education until the seventh grade before leaving the country via Iran. He spent time in Turkey, where he trained as a tile layer, and in Italy before coming to Germany as an
unaccompanied minor on 3 December 2016. The
Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) rejected his asylum application, but he was granted a temporary residence permit. As a result, Noori ws taken into care by an Evangelical youth welfare facility. In September 2017, his asylum application was rejected by German authorities. BAMF had judged Noori's claim of endangerment by an extortionist gang, whom Noori alleged killed his father, to be false due to contradictory statements. He appealed the decision unsuccessfully. In 2020, BAMF again reasoned that Noori faced no threat to his life in Afghanistan and that if returned, his previous career in tiling as well as the vocational training he had received in Germany, would allow him to maintain a "low living standard". The city of Munich issued a toleration notice (Duldungsbescheid) in April 2021 and a residence permit in October 2021, in part due to the
Taliban takeover in Afghanistan and signs of
integration on Noori's part. Upon finishing school and vocational training, he worked in the
service industry after twice failing
sales training. By 2025, he lived in a rented apartment in
Solln and worked in
security. Noori did extensive
bodybuilding in his free time and also successfully took part in a bodybuilding championship in nearby
Augsburg. Noori was active on social media, having accounts on
TikTok and
Instagram, which have since been blocked or deleted. Noori had over 32,000 followers on TikTok alone, where he presented himself as a
fitness influencer. Noori used
steroids,
testosterone, and
creatine, with a relative describing Noori as a
narcissist for his excessive value of
body image. Friends of Noori recalled that Noori felt sometimes overwhelmed by the attention and occasionally frequented a
brothel. Bavarian Interior Minister
Joachim Herrmann (CSU) incorrectly stated that Noori had committed theft and narcotics-related criminal offenses and had been subject to deportation. Herrmann later acknowledged his error, saying that Noori did not have a criminal record and was in Germany legally. Noori reportedly had a residence and work permit from the city of Munich, and the
Munich police announced that he was known to them for testifying as a witness while employed as a
store detective while working for two companies. == Investigation ==