A police officer has stabbed his estranged wife to death at their home in Drama, northern Greece, before fleeing to a nearby mountain and shooting himself, in what investigators are treating as a premeditated killing that occurred despite the victim having reported him as a physical danger just days earlier.
The suspect, a serving officer in the Drama Dias motorized unit, stabbed Antigoni, also a police officer, eight times in the back and torso.
The couple's minor son discovered his mother's body in a basement bedroom on Monday afternoon.
A passing citizen later found the suspect dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound inside his vehicle on Mount Korylovo, a service weapon and spent shell casing recovered at the scene.
Investigators believe the attack was driven by jealousy and resentment following the couple's separation.
The victim had formally reported her husband to superior officers last week, identifying him as a physical threat and triggering a request for a psychiatric evaluation.
A Hellenic Police psychiatrist examined the officer but found no red flags, and he was permitted to retain his service weapon.
An internal investigation into how the victim's safety complaint was handled is now underway, raising uncomfortable questions about the force's protocols for assessing risk when the threat comes from within its own ranks.
The couple's two children — a minor son who raised the alarm and an adult university student — are receiving psychological support. Antigoni's killing is the latest in a series of femicides in Greece that have intensified public pressure on authorities to strengthen protections for women who report threats from partners or former partners.