List of killings by law enforcement officers in pre-reunification Germany
Listed below are people killed by non-military law enforcement officers in Germany prior to reunification on 3 October 1990, whether or not in the line of duty, irrespective of reason or method. Included, too, are cases where individuals died in police custody due to applied techniques. Inclusion in the list implies neither wrongdoing nor justification on the part of the person killed or the officer involved. The listing simply documents occurrences of deaths and is not complete.
Statistics
[edit]year | number killed by use of firearms | number killed by any means
(counted)[clarification needed] |
number of shots fired on persons[3] |
---|---|---|---|
1929 | at least 46[4] | ||
1930 | at least 33[5] | 35 | |
1931 | at least 12 | ||
1952 | at least 31 (e.g., Philipp Müller ) | ||
1963 | at least 4 (North Rhine-Westphalia and Hesse only) | ||
1964 | at least 2 (NRW and Hesse only) | ||
1965 | at least 6 (NRW and Hesse only) | ||
1966 | at least 6 (Bavaria, Bremen, Hamburg, NRW and Hesse only) | ||
1967 | at least 5 (Benno Ohnesorg, otherwise Bavaria, Bremen, Hamburg, NRW and Hesse only) | ||
1968 | at least 10 (Bavaria, Bremen, Hamburg, NRW and Hesse only)[6] | ||
1969 | at least 6 (Bavaria, Bremen, Hamburg, NRW and Hesse only)[6] | ||
1970 | at least 11[6] | ||
1971 | at least 8 (e.g. Petra Schelm, Georg von Rauch )[6] | ||
1972 | at least 4 (e.g. Tommy Weisbecker, Ian McLeod, Richard Epple , Theo Duifhus) | ||
1973 | at least 5 (e.g. Erich Dobhardt) | ||
1974 | 10 (e.g. Günter Jendrian) | ||
1975 | 13 (e.g. Werner Sauber ) | ||
1976 | 8 | 141 | |
1977 | 17 (e.g. Helmut Schlaudraff) | 160 | |
1978 | 8 (e.g. Willi-Peter Stoll , Michael Knoll ) | 111 | |
1979 | 11 | 104 | |
1980 | 16 (e.g. Manfred Perder) | 111 | |
1981 | 17 | 93 | |
1982 | 11 (e.g. Jürgen Bergbauer) | 125 | |
1983 | 24 | 53 | |
1984 | 6 | ||
1985 | 10 | ||
1986 | 12 | ||
1987 | 7 | 92 | |
1988 | 8 | 114 | |
1989 | 10 | 102 | |
1990 | 6 (pre-reunification) | At least 98 | |
Sum |
Figures before 1978 can not be compared directly to later numbers. A list of police killings was first compiled 1997; owing to a legal 20-year document retention limit, some files may have been destroyed. Additionally, the numbers here do not include suicides.
Cases
[edit]1910s
[edit]1919
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1919-03-10 | Jogiches, Leo | 51 | Berlin | Berlin | Jogiches, a Polish Jewish politician who co-founded of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD), was arrested at his apartment in Neukölln in early March. He was extrajudicially killed in custody at Justizvollzugsanstalt Moabit via gunshot to the back of the head by police officer Ernst Tamschick. It's suspected that Tamschick, a right-wing sympathiser with involvement in the Freikorps, had committed the murder as Jogiches was investigating the murders of KPD co-founders Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg by Guards Cavalry Division following the failed Spartacist Uprising; Jogiches was planning to release the details of the killings and names of the shooters. |
1919-05-18 | Dorrenbach, Heinrich | 31 | Berlin | Berlin | Dorrenbach, a German military officer who helped organise the Volksmarinedivision and Social Democratic Party of Germany politician, was arrested hiding at a supporter's house in early May for his role in the 1918 Christmas crisis and Spartacist uprising. He was extrajudicially killed in custody at Moabit Criminal Court via gunshot to the back of the head by police officer Ernst Tamschick, who claimed that Dorrenbach had attempted to escape. |
1920s
[edit]1920
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1920-01-13 | Berlin | Berlin | The Reichstag Bloodbath (German: Blutbad vor dem Reichstag) occurred on January 13, 1920, in front of the Reichstag building in Berlin during negotiations by the Weimar National Assembly on the Works Council Act (German: Betriebsrätegesetz). The number of victims is controversial, but it is regarded as the bloodiest demonstration in modern German history. The event was overshadowed two months later by the Kapp Putsch but remained in the collective memory of Berlin's labour movement and security forces. |
1921
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1921-03-23 | 19 killed | Hamburg | Hamburg | March Action: A communist-organized rally consisting of 15,000 to 20,000 unemployed labourers occupied the shipyards of Vulcan and Blohm+Voss at Steinwerder, as protest and to force the employers to hire more workers. Police barricaded and patroled the streets using armored vehicles and heavy weaponry. At Elbe Tunnel, where 2,000 Vulcan employees had gathered in support of the communists, police fatally shot four workers. Later at Millerntor, police opened fire on a crowed of labourers, killing 15 labourers. Returning fire by armed protesters also killed one policeman . | |
1921-03-24 | 11 killed | Eisleben | Provinz Sachsen | March Action: Five Schutzpolizei Hundertschaften launched a raid in Helfta, which had been largely occupied by militant workers. Police regained control of the district following several shootouts that left 11 labourers and four police officers dead. | |
1921-03-29 | 70 killed | Leuna | Provinz Sachsen | March Action: 21 Schutzpolizei Hundertschaften, led by Reichswehr colonel Bernhard Graf Poninski, stormed the occupied Leuna works. At least 70 militant workers were killed and at least ten more died by drowning in the nearby Saale. Around a hundred were arrested and tortured at the scene. | |
1921-03-29 | Schneidewind | Halle | Provinz Sachsen | March Action: Schutzpolizei raided a communist radio station, killing the two workers manning it. | |
Harzdorf | |||||
1921-03-28 | 18 killed | Essen | Rheinprovinz | March Action: After a conference between the KPD and the Free Workers' Union of Germany (FAUD) ended, a group of labourers attempted to stage a protest on the Burgplatz. Police opened fire, killing 19 people. | |
1921-03-29 | 5 killed | Mannheim | Republik Baden | March Action: During KPD-led protests against police deployment against militant activity, Schutzpolizei opened fire on the crowd, killing five people. | |
1921-03-29 | 2 killed | Karlsruhe | Republik Baden | March Action: During KPD-led protests against police deployment against militant activity, Schutzpolizei opened fire on the crowd, killing two people. | |
1921-03-29 | 30 killed | Gevelsberg | Provinz Westfalen | March Action: Members of the militant Communist Workers' Party of Germany (KAPD) disarmed a police troop and locked them in a building at the trainyard. The KAPD members stole funds from the office, as well as vehicles to disrupt the train traffic. Backup Schutzpolizei from Barmen and Hagen eventually arrived, killing 30 militants. | |
1921-03-30 | 8 killed | Bachra | Land Thüringen | March Action: Around 150 workers who managed to escape the Leuna works raid are ambushed by 200 Schutzpolizei officers during a night march. Eight militants are killed while 60 are arrested, 16 of whom suffered heavy injuries. | |
1921-04-01 | Sült, Wilhelm | 33 | Berlin | Berlin | A KPD politician was arrested on 30 March and held without charge for inciting workers to revolt. While being escorted up a set of stairs at the Alexanderplatz police station, officer Albert Jannicke shot the prisoner in the back. The man was left on the stairs and not attended to for several hours, with several police officers walking by and one shouting for him to die. He died on 2 April at Charité. Jannicke claimed that the prisoner attempted escape, and despite the court acknowledging that it was "highly unbelievable" that he would attempt to escape into the upper floors, as described by the officer, he was not charged. |
1922
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1922-07-17 | Kern, Erwin | 23 | Saaleck | Provinz Sachsen | A member of the ultranationalist terrorist group Organisation Consul and one of the assassins of Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau. Kern and fellow member Hermann Fischer had been hiding out in Saaleck Castle for a day when two police officers were alerted to their presence by travellers who had noticed the light on inside. During the following shootout, Kern was fatally shot, after which Fischer retreated with his compatriot's body and killed himself by gunshot. |
1923
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1932-07-17 | Allfarth, Felix | 22 | München | Bayern | Beer Hall Putsch: Fourteen people were shot by Bavarian police on the Odeonsplatz during the attempted coup led by the Nazi Party in Munich. Four police officers were killed during the fire exchange. Two others (Theodor Casella and Martin Faust ) were killed earlier during a shootout with Reichswehr soldiers. Although all 16 dead are commonly remembered as either SA or NSDAP members, one of them, Karl Kuhn, was not a participant in the coup and instead an onlooker who was accidentally shot in the crossfire. Adolf Hitler falsely claimed that Kuhn was a Freikorps Oberland member in Mein Kampf to use his memory as a Blutzeuge for popular support. A relative seeking to clear Kuhn's name in the 1980s researched his history and found that Kuhn was working as a waiter at the time of the coup, having been shot when he stepped outside the café to investigate the noise. |
Bauriedl, Andreas | 44 | ||||
Ehrlich, Wilhem | 29 | ||||
Hechenberger, Anton | 21 | ||||
Körner, Oskar | 48 | ||||
Laforce, Karl | 19 | ||||
Neubauer, Kurt | 24 | ||||
von Pape, Klaus | 19 | ||||
von der Pfordten, Theodor | 50 | ||||
Rickmers, Johann | 42 | ||||
von Scheubner-Richter, Max Erwin | 39 | ||||
Ritter von Stransky-Griffenfeld, Lorenz | 34 | ||||
Wolf, Wilhelm | 25 | ||||
Kuhn, Karl | 26 |
1929
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1929-03-29 | Reh, Kurt | A drunk Schupo officer shot and killed a labourer. Despite ample evidence and witness testimony, the officer was not indicted.[7] | |||
1929-05-03 | 33 killed | Berlin | Berlin | Blutmai riots: An unscheduled Labour Day protest was suppressed by baton-wielding officers, after which Berlin Police Chief Karl Zörgiebel deployed 13,000 officers to conduct a police raid in Wedding and Neukölln, predominantly left wing-leaning voting blocks. In the ensuing street riots, police killed 33 people, all of them being civilians without affiliation to the left-wing rioters, of whom 1,300 were arrested. The first killed was 53-year-old plumber Max Gemeinhardt on 1 May, who was shot in the head on his balcony for not closing his apartment window on police orders. In one instance, police opened fire on a crowd without provocation, killing 26-year-old labourer Ernst Mai with a shot in the neck. The last death was 53-year-old journalist Charles Mackay who had been working as a correspondent for The Sunday Express after he was ousted from his homecountry of New Zealand for the attempted murder of D'Arcy Cresswell. Mackay was shot by police who had mistaken him for a rioter after he ignored commands to vacate a street. Nearly all the deceased were shot, many from behind, with one exception, Otto Querer, who was instead run over and crushed to death by an armored vehicle. A total of 10,981 gunshots were fired by police over the course of three days. The incident further increased tensions between the KPD and the SPD, as the chief of police was a member of the SPD.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14] | |
1929-XX-XX | 12 killed | A document signed by state minister Albert Grzesinski in the Landtag of Prussia lists 46 killings related to police. |
1930s
[edit]1930
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1930-01-01 | Kobitsch-Meyer, Herbert | Berlin | Berlin | An inmate convicted of serial robbery during the March Action as a member of the Plättner Gruppe began showing signs of illness, including muscle atrophy and weight loss. Prison and government officials denied requests to be given a medical checkup for months before being granted an examination, during which the doctor found him "fit to serve his sentence" and did not require treatment. Three weeks later, his condition worsened and was hospitalized on 31 December before dying the next day. He had lost 40 pounds within less than a year. | |
1930-01-14 | Horn, Hans | 16 | Worms | Rheinhessen Provinz | Darmstadt police opened fire on an unemployment protest, killing a teenage boy via headshot and injuring several more participants. |
1930-01-15 | Görschler, Johannes | Hartmannsdorf | Provinz Sachsen | During a strike at the Recenia textile factory, five workers were shot by police. Three died at the scene, one died in Chemnitz-Röhrsdorf and another died in Freiberg. 17 more were injured. | |
Freitag, Bruno | |||||
Gröger, Walter | |||||
Hänze, Richard | |||||
Thomas, Kurt | |||||
1930-01-17 | Winterstein, Karl | Lübeck | Freie und Hansestadt Lübeck | Several labourers were embroiled in an argument on the sidewalk. A Schupo officer shot into the crowd from across the street, striking one man in the liver, causing his death at a hospital a few hours later. | |
1930-01-30 | Sell, Walter | 16 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A teenage labourer was shot in the forehead during a police raid in the narrow alleys of Gängeviertel in Neustadt. He died during transport to a hospital. |
1930-03-06 | Frischmann, Erich | 26 | Berlin | Berlin | During a protest for the International Day of the Unemployed, a labourer was shot in the chest and arm by a police officer with dum-dum rounds. He died 26 March. |
Krakowsky, Georg | 19 | During a protest for the International Day of the Unemployed, a former member of the Spartacus League who led the Lichtenberg youth wing of the Roter Frontkämpferbund paramilitary was shot in the back by police while in Berlin-Mitte. He died the same day. The shooting occurred around 90 minutes after the previous one. | |||
Peschke, Franz | 25 | A police officer was shooting at protesters when a ricochet struck an uninvolved passerby in the abdomen. He died 18 March. | |||
Fröhder, Karl | Ammendorf | Provinz Sachsen | During a protest for the International Day of the Unemployed, a labourer was killed with a shot in the heart by police. | ||
Orlik, Paul | Döllnitz | Provinz Sachsen | An uninvolved passerby was shot in the head by police. | ||
1930-03-13 | Kißling, Paul | Dresden | Provinz Sachsen | A citizen journalist was taking photos of a KPD-organized hunger march across Saxony when police interrupted the proceedings with armored vehicles and beat the participants with batons. As several officers were blocking off the street from pedestrians, the journalist tried to get a better look by stepping through them while showing off his press pass. He was then beaten with batons by the officers and died 20 March in a hospital from blunt trauma. | |
1930-04-03 | Brillert | Danzig | Freie Stadt Danzig | A farm worker was one of around fifty labourers participating in a protest march from Stutthof to Danzig. On a country road, police surrounded the protesters and fired several shots at them to break up the march, aided by local land owner Hans Wiebe who rode his horse into the group. The farm worker was chased by a Schupo officer and drowned in the Weichsel, being prevented from returning to land by gunfire. Seven other protesters were injured by gunshots or blunt trauma. | |
1930-04-20 | Dyba, Otto | Berlin | Berlin | A private car was trying to drive through a street at Jüdenstraße, which was blocked by a labour protest. Schupo officer Galle made efforts to disperse the crowd and then shot a teenager. Galle was stabbed to death with several flagpoles by a mob of protesters who witnessed the shooting. | |
1930-04-21 | Zahnke, Gustav | 22 | Leipzig | Provinz Sachsen | During the fifth annual Reich Youth Day, two protesters were chased by a police officer, who turned off the safety on his gun during the pursuit. One of the men ran for a basement entrance, when the revolver was aimed at him, at which point the officer caught up to him, hit him with a baton and dragged him back up the stairs, shooting him twice in the back. He died on 25 April. |
1930-05-27 | Kliche, Walter | 22 | Ketzin an der Havel | Provinz Brandenburg | Two brothers and their friend, all members of the Roter Frontkämpferbund, were greeting other members with the identifying phrase "Rot Front!" on the street when a police officer ran towards the group. The officer fired several shots in the air before shooting one of the brothers in the throat before putting the three men under arrest. The wounded man died shortly after at a hospital. |
1930-06-16 | Lillienthal, Ernst | Hamburg | Hamburg | A middle-aged dock worker was shot by police while protesting at the Port of Hamburg. He died the same day at a nearby hospital despite emergency surgery.[7] | |
1930-06-23 | Gozdzikowski, Lothar | Berlin | Berlin | Schupo officer Oskar Kergel confronted a man illegally bathing in a river. During the verbal argument, Kergel fired several shots in the air before shooting the man, who was dressed only in swimming trunks and kept his arms crossed. He died at a hospital. Police arrested communist community leader Willi Koska , who had been one of many witnesses to the shooting and asked Kergel what gave him the authority to aim his gun at an unarmed man, and charged him with obstruction. | |
1930-08-23 | Haubner, Paul | Bunzlau | Provinz Niederschlesien | ||
Schirmer, Reinhold | |||||
Teubner, Oskar | |||||
1930-09-13 | Hanert | Berlin | Berlin | ||
1930-09-19 | Fischer | Kottbus | Provinz Brandenburg | ||
1930-11-09 | Mühlig, Julius | Hilden | Rheinprovinz | ||
Schwab, Wilhelm | |||||
1930-12-03 | Schreiber, Willi | Körlin | Provinz Pommern | ||
Tauber, Alfred | Zwenkau | Provinz Sachsen | |||
Cymborowski, Bruno | Leipzig | Provinz Sachsen | |||
Kießling, Arno | |||||
1930-12-09 | Engel, Wilhelm | Hamburg | Hamburg | ||
1930-12-19 | Altmann, Helmut | Berlin | Berlin | A police officer shot at several communist activists putting up political posters, striking one in the abdomen. The man died of his injuries on 21 December. | |
1930-12-28 | Padowski | Salzwedel | Provinz Sachsen | A KPD member was arrested by police while returning from an informal party meeting. He was booked on suspicion of riding a bicycle drunk, despite witnesses stating that he did not appear intoxicated. The man was locked in a cell and found dead the next day. Police officially logged his cause of death as a heart attack, but an independent medical examination found that the man's body bore signs of blunt force trauma. |
1931
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1931-01-02 | Tannert | Husum | Provinz Schleswig-Holstein | Two labourers were loudly arguing on a street, due to which police officer Holm put one of them under arrest. When the man refused to leave with Holm, the officer fatally shot him. | |
Hackstein, Jakob | Moers | Rheinprovinz | Police shot at labourers during a strike by miners protesting a planned mass layoff. A stray bullet killed an uninvolved platelayer working on the nearby railroad. | ||
1931-01-03 | Steffensdorfer, Wilhelm | 17 | Lintfort | Provinz Westfalen | During a remembrance march for the Ruhrkampf, police opened fire, killing a teenage worker with a gunshot to the head. |
Schramowski, Josef | 22 | Mengede | A remembrance rally for the Ruhrkampf held by KPD-affiliated labourers was disrupted by a Nazi counter-protest. The Nazis eventually opened fire on the crowd, during which police also shot at the workers. A labourer with the Catholic youth order was fatally struck in the crossfire. | ||
1931-01-06 | Wilms, Peter | Solingen | Rheinprovinz | Police broke up a strike by miners, during which a labourer was killed by an officer via blunt head trauma. | |
1931-01-13 | Hoffmann, Hugo | 28 | Erfurt | Land Thüringen | Police were dispatched to a metal good factory, where workers on strike were clashing with scabs. Officers immediately opened fire upon arrival, killing a worker with a shot in the abdomen and injuring two more. |
1931-01-26 | Benthin, Alfons | 18 | Geesthacht | Provinz Schleswig-Holstein | Two labourers from Hamburg attended a Communist counter-protest of roughly a hundred people to a Nazi rally. The Nazis alerted police, who opened fire on the counter-protesters, killing the two Hamburg workers and injuring at least three.[15] |
Geick, Bernhard | 23 | ||||
1931-02-03 | Kolb, Georg | Nürnberg | Bayern | A group of labourers were singing loudly on their way home from a pub. A state police officer attempted to arrest them, but when one of the men resisted, he was shot in the heart. | |
1931-03-21 | N.N. | Barmbeck | Hamburg | During protests following the funeral of KPD politician Ernst Henning , who was killed by SA members, one person was shot and killed by police. | |
1931-04-26 | Freyburger, Karl | 26 | Deutsch Eylau | Provinz Westpreußen | Three members of the NSDAP were causing a disturbance while wandering a street in an intoxicated state. A police patrol stopped them and attempted to perform arrests when one of them, a cattleman with the rank of SA-Sturmbannführer, physically assaulted an officer, who then pulled out his sidearm. The officer was then hit in the arm by another Nazi, causing an accidental discharge that struck the initial attacker in the head. The officer in question pleaded self-defense in his trial and was acquitted. Several streets were named after the deceased during the Third Reich as a martyr, under the false narrative that he died while "fighting for a better Germany". |
1931-06-30 | Sievert, August | 20 | Peine | Provinz Hannover | A shootout between Nazi and communist paramilitary groups was broken up by Hannover police officers, during which a gunshot injured a SA-Mann, a pastry chef by trade, who died on 2 July. A street was partially named after him in 1938. |
1932
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1932-02-21 | Büder, Hans | 28 | Berlin | Berlin | As a locale in Reinickendorf frequented by labourers was being forcefully vacated by a police force, a patron was mortally wounded by a police officer and died days later on 25 February. |
1932-07-15 | Kanitz, Erich | 32 | Weißwasser | Provinz Sachsen | During a rally of the Communist International group Workers International Relief, a shootout between workers and police ensued, during which the chairman of the WIR was shot and killed. |
1932-07-17 | Fühler, Emil | 72 | Altona | Provinz Schleswig-Holstein | Altona Bloody Sunday: A recruitment march by the Sturmabteilung led to violent clashes between SA members, communist counter-protesters and police. A total of 18 people died, 16 of whom were killed by police fire from a sniper battalion positioned on rooftops; the remaining two were SA-Männer shot by communist militants. The deaths consisted of fifteen uninvolved residents and one visitor, the wife of a participant in the march. The event was used by Franz von Papen and Paul von Hindenburg to initiate the Preußenschlag. Police used forged evidence and coerced testimony to shift blame for the civilian casualties on fifteen communist activists, four of whom were indicted. Following the Machtergreifung in 1933, Bruno Tesch, Walter Möller , Karl Wolff , and August Lütgens were given a show trial and subsequently executed by beheading. One of the dead was Anna Raeschke, mother of boxer Ferdinand Raeschke. She was killed via headshot while in her kitchen with only a piece of bread in her mouth while making dinner for her then-12-year-old son. The only non-resident civilian death was Helene Winkler, wife of one of the participants in the Nazi march, who along with the killed Nazis Heinrich Koch and Peter Büddig, was declared a Blutzeuge by the Nazi government.[16][17] |
Fydrich, Emil | 29 | ||||
Gehrke, Walter | 21 | ||||
Gess, Erwin | 23 | ||||
Hagen, Adolf | 35 | ||||
Jackisch, Walter | 46 | ||||
Kalinowski, Franz | 48 | ||||
Kerpl, Emil | 57 | ||||
Miersch, Willi | 25 | ||||
Ragotzki, Herrmann | 48 | ||||
Raeschke, Anna | 33 | ||||
Rasch, Karl | 28 | ||||
Schmitz, Hans | 79 | ||||
Sommer, Erna | 19 | ||||
Würz, Emma | 33 | ||||
Winkler, Helene | 44 | ||||
1932-07-31 | Schrön, Friedrich | 19 | Essen | Rheinprovinz | A business student and SA-Mann was fatally shot by police during a confrontation between Nazi and communist paramilitaries. |
1932-10-23 | Barm, Helmut | 18 | Bochum | Provinz Westfalen | Following a skirmish with police, a SA-Mann was shot by a 25-year-old Schutzpolizei officer, surnamed Buschenhofen, in Langendreer while on his way to the group barracks. He died of his wounds the next day. Buschenhofen, who cited his opposing Marxist views as the motive, was sentenced to 20 months imprisonment for the shooting. Several streets in NRW were named after the deceased as well as an airplane of the Luftwaffe. |
1932-11-04 | 4 killed | Berlin | Berlin | 1932 Berlin transport strike: During a labour strike in Schöneberg by employees of the BVG, four people were killed and another two injured by police sent to break up the protest after it was declared illegal. The dead consisted of three protesters and one uninvolved woman. 46-year-old Kurt Reppich, a customs officer and SA-Scharführer who was shot in the head, was later extensively featured in Nazi propaganda and had his role exaggerated as a main organizer. He was memorialised by the later Nazi government, with a customs boat, a border camp and a school being among the things named after him. | |
1932-11-27 | Elbrächter, Eduard | 41 | Bielefeld | Provinz Westfalen | A SA-Truppführer got into an argument with a police recruit, surnamed Lutterklas, in a pub in Brackwede. Lutterklas left the pub and returned shortly after with his sidearm, shooting the other man twice in the abdomen, leading to his death the next day. A SA unit was named after the deceased in 1936. |
1932-12-07 | Bich, Ernst | 26 | Barmen | Rheinprovinz | Police were called to due to reports of a quarrel involving a large group in a street. One of the participants, a waiter and SA-Scharführer, attempted to escape and fired a revolver shot at the pursuing officers, who subsequently shot him in the stomach, from which the man died two days later in a hospital. The Nazi government would later instead claim that he died from an attack by social democrats and named a street in Neuss-Reuschenberg after him in December 1937. |
1933
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1933-03-21 | Wenzel, Wilhelm | Essen | Gau Essen | A Hilfspolizei officer was attacked by a crowd of left-wing labourers while at a restaurant in Borbeck. The officer fired one shot into the group, striking a man in the chest, who died of the wound at a hospital. | |
1933-04-27 | Funk, Albert | 38 | Recklinghausen | Gau Westfalen-Süd | A prominent KPD politician was arrested on 16 April without cause following Adolf Hitler's rise to power. He was tortured at a Gestapo station and died after sustaining fatal injuries during a fall from a third story window. A court found in 1949 that Funk was either pushed or committed suicide due to the intensity of the injuries inflicted during his detainment. The Gestapo officer in charge of his interrogation was found guilty in 47 cases of assault as an officer and received 12 years imprisonment. |
1933-04-30 | Hackstein, Karl | Grevenbroich | Gau Düsseldorf | A KPD functionary who had gone into hiding to avoid political repression was arrested by police and SA-Hilfspolizei. The officers claimed that the functionary attempted to flee shortly after, which they killed him with several times gunshots to the head and back.[18] | |
1933-06-21/22 | May, Arthur | 31 | Bourheim | Gau Köln-Aachen | A journalist and KPD member critical of the Nazi Party was targeted by the Gestapo after they liquidated his newspaper. He was arrested on 16 June and tortured in police custody at the Yellow Barracks. The journalist was handed to SS troops, working as Hilfspolizei, who intended to interrogate him further in Jülich. The officers in charge of his transport shot and killed him en route, claiming the prisoner had attempted escape. |
1933-07-30 | N.N. | Iserlohn | Gau Westfalen-Süd | A KPD member was fatally shot by Hilfspolizei while fleeing from the scene of a raid in Obergüne. | |
1933-09-02 | Handschuch, Hugo | 23 | München | Gau München-Oberbayern | On 23 August, a member of the SA was uncovered as a KPD infiltrator. The man was tortured at the Brown House before being transferred to Dachau concentration camp where he died over a week later. His official cause of death was a heart attack, but an independent medical examination determined that he died by head trauma causing brain damage.[19] |
1933-09-29 | Axen, Rolf | 21 | Dresden | Gau Sachsen | The underground leader of the East Saxony branch of the KPD was arrested by police and died during torture at the police station. He was the older brother of resistance fighter Hermann Axen. |
1933-11-11 | Konrad | Flensburg | Gau Schleswig-Holstein | A worker handing out political flyers was shot while fleeing. |
1934
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1934-02-01 | Schehr, John | 37 | Berlin | Gau Berlin | Four prominent members of the KPD were transported from Columbia concentration camp by Gestapo and summarily executed on Wannsee Island. Nazi authorities framed the transport as a transfer to another facility and the fatal shootings as resulting from an escape attempt by the prisoners, when in reality, the killings were retaliatory for the murder of the recently identified Gestapo informant Alfred Kattner by his former KPD constituents. It was later determined by SED that Bruno Sattler, who later served as chief of Gestapo in Nazi-occupied Serbia during World War II, was either one of the shooters or the commanding officer in the murders. Sattler was kidnapped by Stasi in 1947, his death being faked while he was sentenced to hard labour for life before being executed in 1972. |
Schönhaar, Eugen | 35 | ||||
Schwarz, Rudolf | 29 | ||||
Steinfurth, Erich | 37 |
1935
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1935-06-XX | N.N. | 19 | Hamburg | Gau Hamburg | Before a planned commemorative drive through the Sachsentor in Bergedorf by Adolf Hitler and his entourage on 24 June, a Roter Frontkämpferbund unit of the banned KPD attacked police with knives, during which several officers were injured and one KPD member was killed by a police gunshot.[20] |
1940s
[edit]1942
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1942-07-13 | c. 1,500 killed | Józefów | Generalgouvernement | Order Police battalions: Reserve Police Battalion 101, consisting of roughly 500 Ordnungspolizei officers of Hamburg Police, were recruited by Wilhelm Trapp to participate in Operation Reinhardt to aid in the "resettlement" of Poles and mass murder of Jews. As part of this, the unit was tasked with collecting the 1,800 Jewish residents of the town, transport approximately 300 of the able-bodied Jewish men to use as forced labourers while summarily executing the remaining 1,500 women, children, elderly and disabled by gunshot. The latter was offered voluntarily with the assurance of no punitive action in case of refusal. Only a minority declined to participate in the killings, some being returned to Germany without punishment as promised when requested, while the majority of officers agreed to partake. From July 1942 to 3 November 1943 (Aktion Erntedankfest), the battalion would participate in the murder of around 83,000 people throughout Poland, being entirely responsible for the direct killing of 44,500 in the towns of Łomazy and Parczew and the Majdanek, Poniatowa and Trawniki concentration camps, as well as aiding Hiwi units in the shooting of circa 10,000 of the total.[21] |
1944
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1944-03-19 | 50 killed | Sagan | Gau Niederschlesien | Stalag Luft III murders: During the escape of 76 Allied servicemen from the Stalag Luft III prisoner-of-war camp, 73 escapees were recaptured, of whom 50 were summarily executed by Gestapo on direct order of Adolf Hitler. | |
1944-09-22 | Lindemann, Fritz | 50 | Berlin | Gau Berlin | A German Army general and co-conspirator in the failed 20 July plot. Gestapo went to arrest Lindemann at a hide-out in Westend and shot him in the leg and stomach when he tried to escape by jumping through a window, dying at a hospital later on. |
1945
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1945-03-12 | 36 killed | Essen | Gau Essen | Montagsloch: Gestapo and Essen Kripo officers summarily executed at least 35 forced labourers from the Soviet Union in Grugapark. A possible 36th individual, whose body was not found, may have also been executed at the spot. All remain unidentified.[22] | |
1945-03-21 | 33 killed | Wuppertal | Gau Düsseldorf | Burgholz massacre : Twelve to fifteen Gestapo officers and ten Wuppertal Kripo officers summarily executed 30 Soviet forced labourers in Burgholz forest. They were all shot in the neck and buried in a mass grave in Küllenhahn. The victims, 24 men and six women, were involved in covert partisan activity and accused of participating in an ambush on a supply train that killed a train worker. During the group's capture the same day, three men, two Russians and one Ukrainian, were fatally shot. Only one body was ever identified, that being Ukrainian teacher Helena Matrosowa. A month later, one of the shooters, Peter Schäfer, a Schutzpolizei first lieutenant, was also executed at the site on the orders of SS and police leader Karl Gutenberger for making "dissenting statements". In 1948, 14 of the shooters and three commanding officers were indicted by a British military court in Hamburg. At least two of the accused committed suicide before conviction. Five officers ended up being sentenced to death and the rest received varying prison terms, but all were pardoned in 1952. | |
1945-03-24 | 13 killed | Rödermark | Gau Kurhessen | Due to approaching Allied forces, Gestapo had 14 prisoners, consisting of mostly of resistance members and forced labourers, transported to Edelmannsgrund field to be summarily executed by shooting. Two prisoners, an unidentified Soviet officer and 21-year old resistance member Gretel Maraldo, were shot while attempting to flee, injuring the former and killing the latter. There was one survivor, 34-year old Johann Goral, a Polish labourer who had only been grazed in the head, played dead, and crawled out of the ditch as the shooters executed the other prisoners.[23] | |
1945-03-26 | 34 killed | Hildesheim | Gau Ost-Hannover | Endphasenverbrechen : Following extensive Allied bombing on 22 March, forced labourers were accused of looting food from destroyed stores. Gestapo raided several supposed hide-outs to no result on 25 March, after which the lead officer Heinrich Huck had four prisoners sent in from a Gestapo facility. After personally killing the sole German prisoner upon arrival, Huck had the three others publicly hanged in the market square, at behest of the town mayor Georg Schrader. The same day, at least 30 labourers, most Italian, were sent by upper command with additional food supplies, but finding the goods to be insufficient and of subpar quality, the labourers were also accused of looting and hanged in a public ceremony.[24][25] | |
1945-03-27 | Hähnel, Albert | 41 | Chemnitz | Gau Sachsen | Endphasenverbrechen : Gestapo summarily executed seven anti-fascist prisoners who had escaped temporary holding at Kaßbau prison on 5 March after Allied bombing damaged the jail and caused a fire. The victims, six KPD members and one SPD member, were shot in Hutholz forest near Neukirchen.[26] |
Reinel, Willy | 48 | ||||
Pech, Alfons | 50 | ||||
Klippel, Walter | 58 | ||||
Krusche, Kurt | 42 | ||||
Brand, Max | 62 | ||||
Junghans, Albert | 41 | ||||
1945-03-30 | 12 killed | Kassel | Gau Kurhessen | Endphasenverbrechen : Gestapo summarily executed twelve prisoners, including a Wehrmacht deserter, from Justizvollzugsanstalt Kassel I in Wehlheiden cemetery. Eight of the victims were identified.[27] | |
1945-03-31 | 79 killed | Kassel | Gau Kurhessen | Endphasenverbrechen : A Gestapo troop led by Franz Marmon summarily executed 79 forced labourers belonging to a railway construction crew at Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe station. The labourers had been abandoned by their guards and were caught looting food supplies from a train cart after several starving German civilians had broken it open and invited the workers to partake, as Allied troops were expected to liberate the city within days. An unknown person reported the looting to Gestapo, after which the labourers were put under arrest, searched and questioned by an interpreter, who was poorly trained, which likely caused miscommunications. The labourers were divided into groups of eight which were then brought into the railyard and executed via gunshots to the head. All the victims were male, aged 20 to 39, and nearly all were Italian, most from Northern Italy, while one unidentified victim was Russian.[28][29] | |
1945-04-05 | 162 killed | Weimar | Gau Thüringen | Endphaseverbrechen : Following the liberation of nearby Buchenwald concentration camp a day earlier, eleven Gestapo officers summarily executed 149 inmates of Weimar prison, consisting of 142 men and seven women, in Webicht forest by the command of senior government councilor Hans Helmut Wolff and buried their bodies in explosion craters. The officers were then ordered to pull back to Böhmen in occupied Czechoslovakia, on their way killing 13 more people, described as "military and civilian individuals, escaped labourers, and prisoners". After the war, only 43 victims were identified by name. | |
1945-04-06 | 11 killed | Düsseldorf | Gau Düsseldorf | Endphasenverbrechen : Gestapo officers summarily executed eleven forced labourers, ten men and one woman, all from the Soviet Union and the Netherlands, in Kalkum forest. Only six victims were identified after the war. Police officer Victor Harnischfeger was determined to have been the leading officer during the killings. Harnischfeger was found not guilty of war crimes by a British military tribunal in Hamburg in 1977, but sentenced to death the next year for a different crime, for participating in the murder of Allied civilian personnel and personally killing two forced labourers. He was pardoned in 1952 and maintained his position as a high-ranking police official until his death in the 1980s.[30] | |
1945-04-11 | 9 killed | Hemer | Gau Westfalen-Süd | Endphasenverbrechen : Gestapo officers who had fled their post in Dortmund on government orders due to the Ruhr pocket found nine prisoners in an abandoned Gestapo jail outpost on 10 April. The prisoners, eight Slavs and one Frenchman, were summarily executed the next night.[31] | |
1945-04-12 | 12 killed | Hagen | Gau Westfalen-Süd | Endphasenverbrechen : Gestapo summarily executed twelve people from various prisons in Hagen in Donnerkuhle quarry. Of the victims, eight Germans and four Slav forced labourers, only the Germans could be identified, being six civilians from Altena, Düsseldorf, Wermelskirchen und Wuppertal, such as 45-year-old Bothe Braune, as well as two "Wehrmacht deserters", really conscientious objecters, such as 20-year-old Eduard Dunker. | |
1945-04-13 | 71 killed | Langenfeld | Gau Westmark | Wenzelnbergschlucht massacre : Due to Allied approach, Karl Gutenberger and Walter Model ordered the execution of several political prisoners from regional facilities through over two dozen officers from Gestapo and Kripo of the Solingen and Wuppertal police departments. 60 were from Justizvollzugsanstalt Remscheid , four from JVA Wuppertal-Bendahl , three from Ronsdorf jailhouse while three were unidentified and of unknown origin. The majority of the identified victims were Germans, while three were Soviet and one was Polish. Director of JVA Remscheid Karl Engelhardt had been able to negotiate the initial demand of 600 inmates to 90, finally only delivering 55 by redirecting 35 to a forced labour division. An additional five detainees were added to JVA Remscheid numbers after being delivered by Wuppertal police the day of the killings, though a sixth had managed to escape on the way. Engelhardt had also misrepresented regular criminal offenders as political prisoners.[32][33] | |
1945-04-14 | 8 killed | Neumünster | Gau Schleswig-Holstein | SS and Gestapo were escorting inmates of Justizvollzugsanstalt Fuhlsbüttel in Hamburg to Arbeitserziehungslager Nordmark in Kiel on a 100 km death march, during which Gestapo officers shot at least eight prisoners. Most were shot because they were too slow from exhaustion, while one, 46-year-old Richard Hartmann, a former Gestapo officer who was denounced just weeks earlier for openly objecting to the organisation's torture and secretly treating prisoners well, was killed for "animating others to escape". Hartmann was shot in the neck in Wittorf, after which the same officer killed resistance fighter turned Nazi informer Maurice Sachs on the same spot.[34][35] |
1946
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1946-03-29 | Danziger, Szmuel Abbe | 36 | Stuttgart | Württemberg-Baden | A troop of 220 German police officers launched a raid for black market goods and counterfeit rations stamps on a displaced persons camp in Stuttgart-West, housing, among others, around 1800 Jewish refugees. Confiscated goods were primarily items such as cigarettes and candy, which had been handed out by the Red Cross via the UNRRA. During the search, a camp guard was injured by a gunshot from police, leading a group of refugees to hurl empty cans and pieces of wood at the officers, with some American servicemen coming to the refugees' aid until German police stated they were conducting a raid. Police opened fire on the crowd from a distance of less than 3 meters, injuring five and killing a Polish Jew, who was a survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau and did forced labour under the Nazi administration. He had returned from France after locating his wife and child at the camp a day earlier. Arrival of American military vehicles ended up breaking up the assault, but no investigation was ever performed.[36][37][38][39][40][41] |
1947
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1947-XX-XX | 9 killed | München | Bayern | Throughout the year, nine people were fatally shot during police operations, mostly involving black market trade. Six police officers were also killed the same year.[42] |
1948
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1948-09-09 | Scheunemann, Wolfgang | 15 | Berlin | Berlin | A student leader of a youth wing branch of the Social Democratic Party of Germany. During the Berlin Blockade, Volkspolizei had been instructed to keep pedestrians away from the border to other Allied-occupation zones when they opened fire on a crowd in Unter den Linden boulevard attempting to push past them, injuring 12. Scheunemann was hit in the stomach by a stray shot while seeking cover. |
1949
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1949-01-23 | Wolf, Kurt Erwin | 45 | East Berlin | Berlin | During the Berlin Blockade, which heavily restricted trade by the Soviet occupation sector to the other three, a truck was shot at by border police in Prenzlauer Berg after failing to respond to a signal to stop, leading to a trucker in the passenger seat being killed by three shots to the head. The company was shipping firewood into West Berlin without a permit and the driver, who was arrested upon his return to East Berlin, had ignored the officers' command to avoid the scheme being uncovered. |
1949-02-17 | Ryll, Helmut | 40 | East Berlin | Berlin | Two Volkspolizei officers stopped a car carrying two people on Oberbaum Bridge because he was driving towards Kreuzberg in West Berlin. The officers entered the vehicle and not realizing the driver, a resident of West Berlin, was drunk, they ordered him to drive back towards East Berlin. When he did not turn around and ignored further commands by the officers, one of them fired two fatal shots at the driver. The car crashed just past the border and West German authorities arrested one of the officers while the other managed to flee back into East Berlin. As they were unable to prove that the arrested VP officer was the shooter, the West German police did not charge him and allowed him to return. |
1949-10-18 | Albrecht, Kurt | 32 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | A couple was being harassed near Frankfurter Hauptbahnhof by a drunk off-duty police officer, 25-year-old Walter Schneider, who pressed the pair for their Kennkarten. Taxi drivers from the nearby depot joined to separate the officer, who suddenly pulled out a gun and hit several people with it. Another cabby had the gun aimed at his face and pushed the officer's arm aside as he pulled the trigger, the shot instead fatally striking another taxi driver in the chest. American MPs arrested the officer, who was charged with manslaughter.[43] |
1950s
[edit]1950
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1950-03-24 | Meyer, Hermann | 40 | Drewitz | Land Brandenburg | A farmer and his companion transporting a slaughtered calf were orderd to stop by East German border police because they suspected, due to the proximity to the border, that they were trying to smuggle the meat into West Germany to sell at a higher profit. Both men fled and were pursued on foot by officers. The companion stopped after four warning shots were fired into the air, while the farmer ignored them and a further three warning shots before the officer chasing him shot him three times in the back. |
1950-06-18 | Wulff, Ernst | 63 | Schildow | Land Brandenburg | A cattle truck attempted to pass by an East German checkpoint with the lights off in order to illegally sell the cattle in West Germany. A border police unit noticed this and pursued the truck in a requisitioned taxi. Several verbal warnings were issued before shots were fired at the vehicle as a warning to halt, one of the shots fatally striking the passenger of the truck in the head. The truck eventually became stuck on a dirt road and the driver was arrested. |
1950-07-25 | Kirsch, Paul | 23 | Neustadt an der Donau | Bayern | During a police operation involving a group of Roma youths outside of a pub, a Czechoslovakian Rom man was shot after grabbing an officer's gun. Two other men were given 3 and 5-month prison sentences for assault. Accounts differ on the incident that led to police intervention. Official records state that the pub owner had called police about a brawl in front of the establishment, that the attackers had been drunk and that the deceased had chambered a round and aimed at an officer. The deceased's grandniece, interviewed in 2020, claimed that the group included teens who had played bowling on a street in front of the pub and asked the deceased to help set the pins up. A disagreement ensued between the teens, which the pub owner observed, misinterpreted as becoming physical, and called police for. When the deceased tried to leave due to not being involved, he was stopped by an officer, leading to a scuffle between them during which the deceased got a hold of the gun and was shot by another officer, Johann A., in response.[44] |
1950-08-29 | Blumberger, Horst | 20 | East Berlin | Berlin | Two brothers-in-law from Lichtenrade in West Berlin unknowingly trespassed into East Berlin territory to try out what they believed to be an air rifle, but after firing it once, they found that it was a loaded .22 sports rifle. After firing another shot, nearby Volkspolizei called out to them and attempted to arrest the pair. Both men fled and as they climbed a fence to the West German side, the younger man was shot twice in the back and bled out shortly after crossing over. The surviving man contacted West German police, and upon arriving at the scene, they found that the body had been turned on his back, presumably by the East German officers who stepped over the border to check whether the deceased was injured or dead. |
1950-10-13 | Fräßdorf, Gerd | 23 | Kleinmachnow | Land Brandenburg | An office worker from East German Coswig got lost while driving in East Berlin after carpooling some business associates and passed a checkpoint on a road that was often used by people who wanted to cross into West Berlin without being searched. as he did not stop, border police signalled him and subsequently fired two warning shots, both to no response, after which the worker was shot and killed by an aimed shot to the head. He presumably did not hear the officers' commands or the gunshots because of his loud engine. |
1951
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1951-03-12 | Heyduck, Albert | 50 | Schöneiche | Land Brandenburg | A cyclist was shot in the back of the head by a border policeman who mistook him for a metal smuggler, as he was carrying several wrapped packages on his bike. He did not follow commands to stop and ignored a warning shot, presumably because he was hard of hearing, before the officer fired an aimed shot. The officer was identified after German reunification and claimed in a 1997 interview, contrary to initial reporting, that the aimed shot was directed at the mudguard, but he accidentally hit the cyclist due to having little practical experience with firearms. He was not charged because authorities were unable to prove intent to kill. |
1951-04-30 | Heinicke, Walter | 48 | Potsdam | Land Brandenburg | Three farmers were travelling through the Babelsberg area by bicycle to trade grain for goods, which was illegal in the GDR. They were spotted by four Volkspolizei officers, who ordered them to stop for a search, but the group instead accelerated to flee. One officer then fired a warning shot at the group, which struck one of the farmers in the head who died at a hospital. The other two men were able to escape to West Berlin. The officer who fired the killing shots was identified as Werner W. through contemporary reports after reunification, but he denied the charge and claimed one of his three colleagues, who were left unnamed, had instead opened fire. He was not charged because there was reasonable doubt for his claim. |
1951-07-14 | Pokrzywinski, Arthur | 45 | Schönefeld | Land Brandenburg | A suspected smuggler was able to escape custody shortly after arrest. Two officers pursued the man as he was heading towards West Berlin, but as one of them caught up, a scuffle occurred. Because the officer believed the smuggler was about to grab his gun, he fired a shot that killed the suspect. |
1951-08-14 | Dunkel, Martin | 36 | Schönefeld | Land Brandenburg | A farmer was arrested on suspicion of smuggling grain to West Berlin, but escaped as he was being escorted to a police station on foot. He ignored several warning shots before an officer fatally shot him from behind. Although reports gave the name of the shooter, Willi S., neither he or the others involved could not be tracked down following reunification, due to which the investigation was shut down. |
1951-08-28 | Stütz, Rudolf | 30 | East Berlin | Berlin | Shortly before the end of his shift, a West German police officer was shot in the stomach and thigh during a shootout with two border police officers and two Soviet soldiers at the Lichterfelde-Steglitz checkpoint and died a few days later on 2 September. There are conflicting accounts of the events. GDR records stated that the officer had crossed the border and shot at the guards, who returned fire. The officer claimed before his death that he had accompanied a woman who had asked for an escort to the checkpoint, where East German soldiers and police officers had tried to pull him over the turnpike into East Germany while shooting at him, to which he returned fire before being let go. Fellow colleagues testified that the officer had been drinking that night, with a suspect in the shooting, a former border officer questioned in 1993, saying that he and the deceased were drinking buddies, but that he had to turn him away several times before the same night when he came over to chat. The border officer claimed he was sleeping in the checkpoint at the time and not involved in the shooting. It remains unknown whether the West German officer stepped over the border or not. |
1952
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1952-04-26 | Gerbholz, Heinrich | 41 | Großziehten | Land Brandenburg | A farmer was supposed to be arrested on suspicion of smuggling, as he was known to associate with the border police and traded with them, also taking them out to West Berlin, both against their regulations. The farmer attempted to flee and was shot in the stomach, apparently by a warning shot. The officers involved were transferred and after reunification, although their names were known, they could not be tracked down, thus the investigation was halted |
1952-05-11 | Müller, Philipp | 21 | Essen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | During a forbidden protest against West Germany's rearmament organised by leftist and pacifist groups, police opened fire on the crowd, killing a member of the NRW Free German Youth, as well as injuring another two protesters. Police defended their actions, stating that they had been pelted with stones, later also alleging that officers believed that gunshots were being fired at them, with no evidence for the latter. Despite appeals for an investigative committee into the shooting by the Communist Party of Germany, the court of Dortmund deemed the use of deadly force as self-defense.[45] |
1952-06-02 | Fickelschee, Gerhard | 20 | Klein Glienicke | Bezirk Potsdam | A commuter refused to show his papers at a checkpoint into West Berlin, where he worked, and tried to escape border police. After a warning shot was fired, the officers fatally shot him from behind. |
1953
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1953-02-19 | Fraunhofer, Ludwig | 24 | East Berlin | Berlin | Two men from West Berlin travelled to East Berlin to go on a drinking binge, as alcohol was cheaper there. They later entered a checkpoint in Treptow to return, but one of the men could not state his reason for entering and was also unable to provide documents besides a POW release certificate; the man, originally from Rauheck, had eloped with his girlfriend from East German Zeitz a month earlier and only recently applied for new ID papers to travel back to Bavaria. He subsequently ran past the checkpoint to the West German side, chased by a Volkspolizei officer, who ordered him to stop and fired two warning shots before shooting the man in the back. He was declared dead at a police hospital. The officers involved were praised by their superiors, with the shooter receiving a salary bonus and extra vacation days. The shooter was identified after reunification and sentenced to one year imprisonment for manslaughter in 1996. |
1953-02-21 | Grubenstein, Willy | 48 | East Berlin | Berlin | Two trucks approaching a Friedrichshain checkpoint into West Berlin were signalled to stop for a search, but instead slowed down slightly before accelerating again. Volkspolizei fired at both vehicles, injuring the female passenger of the first truck while killing the driver of the second. It was revealed that the trucks contained the belongings of a couple from Thuringia and that the deceased man was a gift shop owner who had agreed to help the couple escape East Germany. Despite attempts to find the shooter, the investigation was halted due to a lack of leads. |
1953-06-17 | Schmidt, Gerhard | 26 | Halle | Bezirk Halle | During the East German uprising of June 1953, an agrarian doctorate student was accidentally shot and killed by a lungshot from a ricocheting bullet fired by police, who were trying to placate a crowd of protesters at Roter Ochse prison. SED officials used his death in propaganda, claiming that he had been killed by "fascist provocateurs" when he refused to participate in rioting. A total of 50 people were killed in total, excluding 5 executions headed by Soviet authorities, 33 of whom, including Schmidt, were killed by either Volkspolizei or Soviet troops, although only Schmidt could be definitively proven as a victim to police fire. |
1953-06-23 | Röhling, Wolfgang | 15 | East Berlin | Berlin | A group of teenage boys were trying to gain access to the Berlin–Spandau Ship Canal for bathing, but were denied by the two guarding Volkspolizei officers, due to orders to temporarily block any possible way into West Berlin in the aftermath of the East German uprising of June 1953. Due to this, the teenagers began throwing stones from a distance and shouting insults at the officers. A troop of Kasernierte Volkspolizei from a neighbouring post saw this and threatened the group, most of whom took cover behind a stone wall, safe for one, who continued to stand by the riverside. A KVP officer then shot the remaining boy in the head, before another shot to the back of the head killed him as he tried to leave. A total of 21 shots were fired. The shooter was never identified. |
1953-08-18 | Schulz, Theodor | 51 | East Berlin | Berlin | A man who was wanted for participating in protests against the SED was shot twice in the head by three KVP officers in Wedding. There are conflicting reports about the preceding events, with GDR records stating that he had assaulted officers with a briefcase after being asked to provide ID, while West Berlin police stated that he ran away from a search while trying to cross into West Berlin with several others. |
1953-12-18 | Prey, Richard | 45 | East Berlin | Berlin | A man from West Berlin ran away from customs control at a checkpoint in Berlin-Mitte; he had bought cheaper groceries in East Berlin and was trying to bring them back over the border, which constituted as smuggling by East German authorities. After failing to respond to verbal commands and a warning shot, a Volkspolizei officer shot the man twice in the lower torso. He died the same night at a hospital despite emergency surgery. After reunification, the shooter, Alfred F., could not be tracked down and the investigation was halted. |
1953-12-24 | Scheugenpflug, Karl | 73 | München | Bayern | Munich Communal Police officer Vogt was driving a police van when he struck an elderly pedestrian walking to Midnight Mass with his wife and step-son in Sendling. Vogt, who was on patrol, claimed that he had swerved to avoid a different pedestrian who had suddenly stepped on the road and that he drove at an acceptable speed of 40 km/h, despite the crash being severe enough to cause the van to overturn while also splitting open and uprooting a tree. Police conducted 17 alcohol tests on the victim before his death in the ambulance to prove he had been drunk at the time of the collision, 16 attempts yielding no results and the 17th showing he was sober. No such test was conducted on Vogt. |
1954
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1954-11-21 | Minckwitz, Alfred Hans | 47 | East Berlin | Berlin | A man tried to escape border police after being unable to provide identifying papers and after several warning shots, he was shot in the back, later dying at Charité hospital. |
1954-08-10 | Doebbecke, Conrad | 65 | East Berlin | Berlin | A man from Wannsee in West Berlin drove into East German territory near the checkpoint Dreilinden, where he observed traffic for several minutes before driving back towards the highway. Although city commandant Pyotr Dibrova had ordered a cessation of searches following backlash over the death of Joachim Wozniak through drunk Soviet soldiers, two border policemen still tried to order the car to stop due to the suspicious incident, which instead accelerated. After a warning shot, four aimed gunshots were fired, three of which hit the driver in the left shoulder, left thigh and the hip. He was subsequently bandaged and brought to a hospital in Potsdam by the officers. Despite successful emergency surgery and a good prognosis, he died on 8 September from his wounds. The deceased had been suffering from Alzheimer's disease and was driving without a licence, as stated by his wife. His killing was widely publicised as he was a real estate owner in Berlin and also a famed antiques salesman and art collector, who sold over a hundred paintings to the Landesmuseum Hannover. It was not widely reported that he was an early member of the Nazi Party who had worked in the legal system as a jurist and obtained most of the artwork and land through seized property from Aryanisation.[46][47] The officer who fired the killing shots was identified after reunification, but not charged as the statute of limitations had run out, since an investigation was already headed at the time of the shooting. |
1954-11-15 | Nettesheim, Helene | 22 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A sports car did not stop after being signalled by a Bereitschaftspolizei officer due to a countrywide search for a gang of highway robbers. The officer fired a shot from his submachine gun at the fleeing vehicle, fatally striking the passenger, the wife of the driver, who later stated that he tried to avoid the traffic check because he was driving the car, which he was supposed to sell, without the owner's permission to attend his grandmother's 80th birthday and did not have papers for the vehicle. An article about the death inspired director Géza von Cziffra to make the 1955 film Bandits of the Autobahn.[48][49] |
1955
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1955-01-29 | Meier, Johannes | 69 | Buckow | Bezirk Frankfurt | A man was found cowering by the border to West Berlin by two border police officers. After he did not respond to verbal commands, an officer shot the man in the chest from a distance of six meters. The deceased had fled the GDR in 1953 and resided in West Berlin as a tolerated refugee. He had suffered from psychosis and been released from a two-month stay at mental asylum after being on suicide watch 17 days earlier.[50] |
1955-04-21 | Schwietzer, Wilhelm | 44 | Kleinmachnow | Bezirk Potsdam | A man from West Berlin was arrested at Dreilinden S-Bahn by border police. He had formerly been a farmer in East German Cottbus, but moved away to avoid a fine illegal forest clearing to sell lumber in January 1950. Due to this, he was wanted and would have to serve 18 months in prison. Four police officer were escorting him to the station when he attempted to escape on foot and after a warning shot, at least two officers shot him 14 times in the back, after which he died at a hospital. Two of the officers were found after reunification, but they denied being the shooters. Since it could not be proven that they were responsible, the investigation was halted in December 1996. |
1955-06-30 | Bröker, Fredi | 29 | East Berlin | Berlin | A car driving into East Berlin was stopped by a Volkspolizei officer for an ID check. Afterwards, the officer got into the passenger seat and asked the man to drive up to the Alt-Treptow checkpoint further up. Instead, the driver put the car in reverse in direction of Neukölln in West Berlin. The officer then shot the driver in the arm, piercing into his stomach before exiting the car via tuck and roll. Heavily injured, the man managed to maneuver his car into West Berlin, where police brought him to a hospital, where he died on 5 July. It was found that the deceased was a former GDR citizen who had escaped East Germany after being arrested during the 1953 protests and took up the false identity of "Wolfgang Pankow". Despite being unemployed, he lived a wealthy lifestyle, owning an expensive BMW and living in a large apartment with several others. A search of the home yielded a number of licence plates, photo developing equipment, and several boxes, the contents of which were not disclosed by police. It's suspected that he was a member of an anti-communist organisation or a spy for a West German government agency. |
1955-09-18 | Borstel, Otto | 22 | East Berlin | Berlin | A man was shot by a Volkspolizei officer during a car search in Berlin-Mitte. |
1955-11-21 | Runge, Wilhelm | 28 | East Berlin | Berlin | A Volkspolizei officer was observing an abandoned property in Berlin-Mitte after he saw two men stealing scrap metal from there. He mistook two other men who had crossed over from West Berlin for the thieves and gave chase when they turned back to the border after spotting him. The officer fired a warning shot before shooting one of the men in the back. The man died on the way to the hospital. The shooter was identified, but could not be tracked down after reunification. |
1955-12-30 | Tögel, Walter | 34 | East Berlin | Berlin | Volkspolizei stopped a cyclist for a search at a Berlin-Mitte checkpoint into West Berlin. Because he was trying to smuggle several pounds of sausage, ham, and butter in his backpack, the man attempted to evade the officers, but he was pushed of his bike during the struggle. The man attempted to cross the border, but an officer shot him after firing several warning shots. The man was still able to make it to West Berlin territory, where he was brought to a hospital where he died the same day. |
1956
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1956-03-26 | Scholz, Hans-Roland | 15 | East Berlin | Berlin | A teenager was shot and killed by border police in Grünau while attempting to escape to West Berlin with some colleagues. |
1957
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1957-04-15 | Auris, Else | 48 | Großbeeren | Bezirk Potsdam | A woman was shot in Osdorfer Forest by border police while fleeing towards West Berlin and died at the scene from her wounds. |
1957-04-XX | N.N. | Hannover | Niedersachsen | Police fatally shot a homeless vagrant in shrubbery after mistaking him for a wanted criminal.[51] |
1958
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1958-01-10 | N.N. | Mittenwald | Bayern | A 54-year-old police officer shot and killed a "drunken ruffian". He was put on trial on 29 September.[51] | |
1958-06-05 | N.N. | 26 | Neu-Ulm | Bayern | A man arrested for "approaching a woman in an indecent manner" was shot when he attempted to escape.[51] |
1958-08-13 | Hettich, Peter | 15 | München | Bayern | A teenage apprentice was fatally shot after police caught him breaking into a youth center.[51] |
1959
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1959-12-06 | Bartolmee, Roland | 18 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | Two plainclothed police officers on night patrol in Altstadt saw a teenager walking and shouted at the figure to stop, without identifying themselves as police. The teenager ran off, at which point 35-year-old officer Edgar Hüttig fired a warning shot, supposedly in the air, although it was later determined the round grazed the teenager in the heel. Having lost track of the suspect, the officers issued more verbal commands, with Hüttig eventually firing another shot, which struck the suspect, who had been hiding behind cars and leapt to the side to sprint away. An unloaded gas pistol and two rounds were found in his pants pocket afterwards. Hüttig and his partner, Rudi Pfeffer, changed several details when reporting the incident to their superiors, such as the deceased's age (19 instead of 18) and the location of the gunshot (neck instead of forehead). The officers also claimed they believed him to be a car thief because he was passing too closely by the parked cars, despite him not having any tool in his hands. Hüttig was subsequently tried for negligent homicide in 1960.[51] |
1959-12-09 | N.N. | 33 | Ludwigshafen | Rheinland-Pfalz | Three police officers were transporting a convict when he managed to escape during the drive. The officers subsequently fired and hit the convict in the legs and arms. It is not specified whether the wounds were fatal.[51] |
1959-XX-XX | N.N. | 24 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A man was subjected to two CN gas canisters inside a basement during a police operation. After his arrest, he suffered from breathing difficulties and subsequently died from pulmonary edema at a hospital. |
1960s
[edit]1960
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1960-02-25 | N.N. | 33 | Between Lünen and Dortmund | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A moped driver was fatally injured by a warning shot on a road, presumably on B236.[51] |
1960-11-05 | Czori, Joska | 27 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A fight broke out at a butcher's shop in Niendorf between Polish Roma, store staff, and other patrons after a member of the Roma had cut in line and was punched in the face by the owner. Police were called about a "brawl with gypsy involvement" and after beating some of them with nightsticks, a 47-year-old officer fired on three of the Roma, killing two and injuring one, reportedly because one had grabbed an officer's baton.[44][52] |
Kwiek, Karol | 26 |
1961
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1961-12-03 | N.N. | 21 | Brühl | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Two car thieves were incidentally stopped by a police patrol near a forest as they were driving a vehicle they had stolen three weeks earlier. The officers were shot at with a hunting rifle, leading them to return fire, during which one of the thieves was fatally shot.[53] |
1961-12-14 | N.N. | 20 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Police caught a man in the process of stealing a car. Upon spotting the officers heading his way, he drove away, with the officers trying to stop him by shooting at the car's tires, but as they were aiming too high, the bullets struck the driver instead, causing his death.[54] |
1962
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1962-03-22 | N.N. | 23 | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Passerby called police because a man was threatening his wife with a knife near the Aachener Weiher. Police arrived to find the man stabbing the woman, and after several verbal commands and warning shots, he was shot in the heart when he did not desist.[55] |
1962-05-23 | Göring, Peter | 21 | East Berlin | Berlin | A soldier of the Border Troops of the German Democratic Republic, who was part of a patrol group along the Berlin–Spandau Ship Canal near the Invalids' Cemetery between East and West Berlin. On 23 May 1962, he observed a 14-year-old boy within the currents trying to hide himself from the guards. To prevent him from committing Republikflucht, several GDR-border guards shot at the boy in the river, injuring him with eight gunshots to the back. Göring left his post in the guard tower despite superior orders in an attempt to get in position for a clearer shot on the boy, also disregarding the general policy of not shooting towards at West German territory. The shots rang past a West German police patrol that had coincidentally passed by and was attempting to assist the boy, which led the officers to return fire on the guards, fatally hitting Göring and injuring another guard. Two bullets hit Göring directly, the deadly wound was caused by another bullet's ricochet.[56] |
1962-05-XX | Diefenbacher, Volker | Bruchsal | Baden-Württemberg | Two police officers were cleaning their guns at the police station when the weapon of one accidentally misfired, killing the other.[57] | |
1962-08-14 | Arnstadt, Rudi | 35 | Wiesenfeld | Thüringen | Two soldiers of the Border Troops of the German Democratic Republic, Rudi Arnstadt and Karlheinz Roßner, encountered a West German Bundesgrenzschutz officer on East German territory and told him to leave. When the pair spotted another three BGS officers trespassing, they ambushed them with their guns drawn to put them under arrest. Roßner fired a warning shot and in reaction to this, one of the BGS officers, 23-year-old Hans Plüschke , then fatally shot Arnstadt above the right eye before returning to the West German side, telling his superiors they had been shot at. East German authorities sentenced Plüschke to 25 years imprisonment in absentia, but his extradition was not approved since Plüschke was not charged in West Germany, which deemed the shooting self-defense based on Plüschke's version of events. On 15 March 1998, 9 years after the dissolution of the SED and the reunification of Germany, Plüschke, who had now been working as a taxi driver, was found murdered on B84 near Hünfeld, around 10 km from Wiesenfeld, dead from a gunshot wound above the right eye. Plüschke had revealed his identity as the shooter in a RTL segment in 1993 and again in October 1997, due to which he had been receiving anonymous death threats. Former colleagues of Arnstadt, as well as his son and daughter were questioned, but no leads were obtained and the murder remains unsolved. |
1962-XX-XX | N.N. | Hechingen | Baden-Württemberg | A police officer accidentally shot and killed a man. He was tried, but found not guilty of negligent homicide on 22 March 1963, partially because the court opined that a mechanical failure of the Beretta Model 38 he used could not be ruled out.[58] |
1965
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1965-08-27 | Baum, Peter | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | During the arrest of a car thief, a police officer was accidentally shot in the head by a colleague. He died on 24 December from his wounds after several brain surgeries and contracting yellow fever.[59] |
1966
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1966-08-03 | Schoen, Jürgen Rudolf | 31 | Hamminkeln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Police were called after motorists reported a man from Griesheim for "unsociable behaviour" after he exposed himself to a truck driver at a rest stop. The man engaged two officers in a footchase through shrubbery and was shot when an officer's gun accidentally discharged. Ammunition was found in his car, leading investigators to believe that the man, who had only one prior recorded incident with police, had been involved in criminal activity.[55] |
1967
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1967-06-02 | Ohnesorg, Benno | 26 | West Berlin | West Berlin | During a demonstration in Charlottenburg against the state visit of the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the West-Berlin police officer Karl-Heinz Kurras shot and killed a 26-year-old civilian, Benno Ohnesorg, with a close-range pistol shot to the back of the head. The ensuing post-killing investigation suffered from missing pieces of evidence, arranged testimonies of the attending policemen, and cover-ups in the medical record of the autopsy. Although Kurras' self-defense plea was dismissed in court, he was found not guily in a trial the same year. Kurras, who was suspended from duty shortly after the shooting, was rehired by West Berlin police in 1971 and became embroiled in a series of police misconduct cases, also sexually assaulting a 9-year-old girl by grabbing and kissing her while drunk on duty while illegally carrying a police firearm. In 2009, it was discovered that Karl-Heinz Kurras was listed as an informal collaborator of the East German secret police Stasi since 1955 and a long-time member of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany, the ruling East German Communist party, providing internal information of the West Berlin political police. It was ultimately determined that this affiliation was unrelated to the killing of Ohnesorg.[60][61] |
1968
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1968-01-30 | N.N. | Homberg | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A burglar was spotted on the roof of a two-story apartment building by patrons of a nearby pub. Upon being confronted by police, the burglar disobeyed orders to stay put and broke into a flat, beating a 68-year-old man into submission before jumping from a window onto the nearby street after finding the door out locked. He was shot by a police officer when he attempted to attack him with a screwdriver, dying on the way to a hospital. He remained unidentified.[55] | |
1968-12-14 | N.N. | 22 | Nürtingen | Baden-Württemberg | A mentally ill Yugoslavian migrant worker went on a stabbing spree in a tenement building in Raidwangen, killing a 6-year-old boy and a 69-year-old man, both German nationals. as well as injuring 5 more people. The attacker was shot by a police officer he tried to attack.[62] |
1968-12-30 | Kopf, Herbert | 48 | Rastatt | Baden-Württemberg | After a bank robbery in Badenweiler, robber Bruno Mateyka fled in a getaway vehicle with the bank manager as a hostage, pressing a gun to his temple while driving. Pursuing police fired over 100 shots at the vehicle, injuring Mateyka, who shot his hostage point-blank in the head. Mateyka was convicted of the murder, but the coroner also noted that the hostage had also been hit by police fire and that one of the wounds to the shoulder would have been fatal. The officers were investigated for misconduct, but not charged.[63] |
1969
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1969-01-08 | Schecke, Hans | 29 | Altbach | Baden-Württemberg | Two police officers searched the apartment of a previously convicted burglar suspected of stealing several pistols, a rifle, and ammo from a gun shop in Esslingen. After finding the loot under the bed, the officers waited for the man to come home and attempted to perform an arrest. Apparently aware of the police's presence, the man immediately fire a shot from a pistol upon arriving, killing 30-year-old officer Klaus Scharfenort. He was then shot and killed by the other officer.[64] |
1969-02-04 | Witkowski, Friedhelm | 21 | Herne | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Three plainclothed police officers were tasked with apprehending a burglar at a homeless shelter. Two officers, 39-year-old Werner Bauland and 24-year-old Hans-Werner Grünberg, stayed outside the shelter while a third, 36-year-old Lothar Fülbier, entered dressed as a vagrant and asked around for the suspect in the barracks he was last recorded in. After locating the suspect lodging in an apartment leased by the family of his 18-year-old fiancée Dagmar Trzaskawka, Fülbier presented a gun in his coat, saying "Jetzt bist du dran" ("Now you're done for"). Trzaskawka, believing the officer to be a robber or criminal associate, then pushed her fiancé into the adjacent kitchen and shut the door on the officer, who fired four shots through the door, then another two through the door panel, narrowly missing Trzaskawka's parents and three of her younger siblings. The suspect tried to prevent Fülbier from entering by leaning against the door, but the officer broke through and immediately shot the man in the thigh. The man fled into another room, with Fülbier missing another shot just as Bauland, alerted by the gunfire, entered as well and fired a total of four shots, with one fatally injuring the suspect in the back. No one was charged, even after it was revealed that Fülbier had a blood alcohol level of 2,14 at the time of the operation.[65] |
1969-03-16 | K., A. | 26 | Schleswig | Schleswig-Holstein | Three police officers saw a car run a stop sign and engaged in a car chase with the 28-year-old driver and his passenger, his fiancée. On the E3, after being about to lose the car for the third time, an officer fired 16 shots at the vehicle, hitting the passenger in the hip and liver. The driver stopped the car on the side of the road and fled on foot. She was brought to a hospital in life-threatening condition and was alive as of 13 April, but no updates were made on her survival. The officer was to be indicted for negligent bodily harm.[66] |
1969-11-09 | Ehlert, Bernd | 9 | Wolfach | Baden-Württemberg | A 37-year-old man threatened to kill his wife and children with a gun. When police stormed the apartment, a shot by police that injured the hostage taker passed through him and fatally struck one of his children. |
1970s
[edit]1971
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1971-01-31 | Braatz, Peter | 27 | West Berlin | Berlin | A car thief was caught in the act in front of the Theater des Westens and restrained by the owner of the vehicle and a taxi driver when he was shot in the neck by 38-year-old police officer Horst Salzwedel. The officer variously stated that he wanted "quiet to come" or that the thief had reached into his pocket. Salzwedel claimed to have no recollection of shooting the suspect, but an investigation showed that the officer had held the pistol into the side of the man's neck at point-blank range. He was sentenced to seven months probation on 27 September.[67][68][69][70] |
1971-05-09/11 | N.N. | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A burglar was fatally shot in the head by a police officer after he opened fire during his escape.[71][6] | |
1971-05-20/21 | N.N. | München | Bayern | Police were notified because a drunk migrant worker was wielding a gun in a bar. Officers shot the man in what they described as self-defense, after which the weapon was identified as a gas pistol.[71] | |
1971-05-24 | Albert, Hans | 27 | München | Bayern | A prison escapee was shot and killed by Kripo while driving in Schwabing. Ten shots were fired on the moving vehicle.[68] |
1971-05-28 | N.N. | Hamburg | Hamburg | A drunk man was firing a gas pistol at his doorstep and fatally shot in the head by plainclothed police as a result.[71] | |
1971-06-09 | N.N. | 21 | Herne | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A burglar was shot eleven times by two police officers and died several months later of his wounds after 23 August.[71] |
1971-07-07 | Christ, Ernst | 28 | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | An inmate suffering from meningitis was pelted with stones in his cell because an officer was annoyed by his constant screaming. He was then locked in a holding cell for the night, with the heating turned up all the way during an outside temperature of 30 degrees Celsius. The inmate was found dead the next morning, but the officer was not charged.[72] |
1971-07-15 | Schelm, Petra | 20 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A member of the RAF, Schelm was shot in the face while fleeing from police, after she and Werner Hoppe had broken through a police road block in Bahrenfeld.[73] |
1971-08-04 | Rammelmayr, Hans Georg | 31 | München | Bayern | Two bank robbers, German national Hans Georg Rammelmayr and Austiran national Dimitri Todorov , held up a Deutsche Bank location in Prinzregentenstraße. Police had complied with their demands for two million mark and a getaway vehicle, but once Rammelmayr entered the car as the last one, police marksmen opened fire, striking him and one of the hostages, killing both. Police initially assumed that Rammelmayr had shot the hostage in his dying moments, but the attending medical team, which included the incumbent second mayor of Munich Hans Steinkohl , and the pathologist found that the caliber she had been shot with did not belong to the PPSh-41 he had been carrying.[74] |
Reppel, Ingrid | 20 | ||||
1971-08-10 | N.N. | Münster | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A drunk man shot at police during a blood test. He was shot in the shoulder "to put him out of combat", but the man died of the wound before 23 August.[6] | |
1971-08-XX | N.N. | Mühlheim | Hessen | During the pursuit of a burglar, a police officer aimed to shoot him in the legs, but instead fatally shot him in the stomach.[68] | |
1971-08-XX | Kozinowski, Harald | 32 | St. Georgen | Baden-Württemberg | Police were congregating in front of an apartment building to deal with a resident who had taken his family at gunpoint. With commands to fire at will, an officer accidentally killed an uninvolved neighbor with a shot through the right eye, after the man, curious about the unannounced police presence, had opened his bedroom window for a better look.[68] |
1971-08-XX | Putra, Josip | München | Bayern | A Yugoslavian migrant worker was accidentally killed by police when an officer's sidearm discharged and hit him in the stomach.[71][75] | |
1971-08-18/19 | N.N. | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | A Greek national fled after he was caught attempting to sell hashish to an undercover officer and was subsequently shot in the chest when he stopped and pulled out a knife.[71][6] | |
1971-10-25 | N.N. | 24 | Tübingen | Baden-Württemberg | A foreign migrant worker was shot by police.[76] |
1971-11-09 | N.N. | Sinsheim | Baden-Württemberg | A police officer shot a man after he attacked another officer.[71] | |
1971-12-04 | von Rauch, Georg | 24 | West Berlin | Berlin | A member of the militant anarchist 2 June Movement opened fire during a traffic check in Schöneberg and was shot by police while his fellow anarchist, 24-year-old Bommi Baumann, escaped. |
1971-12-29 | Vicenik, Kurt | 44 | Baltersweiler | Saarland | On 27 December, three bank robbers held up a Deutsche Bank location at the square of Cologne Cathedral. The robbers shot into the ceiling and forced their hostages against the wall as they retrieved 311,000 DM from the vault, but because an alarm system was activated, alerting a police troop from a nearby armored bank truck, the scene was surrounded by SEK, who shot out the tires of the getaway vehicle. After threatening the life of the hostages for two hours, a vehicle was provided, with two high-ranking police officials volunteering to replace two hostages they would take with them and drive the robbers south to the French border at their request. The eight-hour drive was always followed by police at a distance, as well as journalists, one of whom jumped on the car's windshield to take a photo during a red light and was nearly shot for it, but all lost track of the robbers when they passed through Saarbrücken. When the officer driving refused to drive into France, the robbers left on foot and took another car and the 21-year-old driver hostage. They were discovered after a 45-hour manhunt, driving north of Saarbrücken after apparently getting lost. The main robber demanded another police official in exchange for the hostage, for which Police Council Julius Groß was brought in via helicopter. While discussing the terms, Groß noticed he had a clear shot on the robber and the accomplices were distracted, pulling out his sidearm to command a surrender, shooting and injuring the robber in the torso as he reached for his own gun. Two stray shots were fired by the robber that almost hit the hostage motorist, but the shooting allowed for the arrest of all three suspects. The gang were identified as an Austrian and two French nationals, all with connections to "low-level organized crime" in Marseille. The Austrian ringleader died of his wounds fifteen days later on 13 January 1972.[77][78][79] |
1972
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1972-01-01 | Neumann, Robert | 18 | Hamburg | Hamburg | Police arrested a teenager in Farmsen because he was causing a disturbance. At the station, two police officers beat the teenager with batons while a third choked him, causing his death. Police claimed self-defense.[80] |
1972-01-31 | Finnendahl, Gerhard Arnold | 32 | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | A car thief driving a stolen semi-trailer truck engaged police in a 60 km/h chase over the Mannheim Interchange on either A6 or A656, ignoring commands and signals to stop. When the driver pulled over and attempted to flee on foot, an officer shot him in the back of the head in what was later deemed self-defense. |
1972-02-07 | Böse, Wilhelm | Regensburg | Bayern | A waiter was shot and killed by police.[76] | |
1972-02-18 | Stelzer, Heinz | 32 | Hessen | [76] | |
1972-02-27 | N.N. | Nürnberg | Bayern | As police were pursuing an Italian national in a car chase, he shot and killed 29-year-old police officer Roland Luff before being fatally shot by his colleagues.[81] | |
1972-03-01 | Epple, Richard | 17 | Herrenberg | Baden-Württemberg | Epple fled in a car from the police and broke through two road blocks. Police presumed him to be a wanted RAF terrorist and ordered officers to stop the car by all means. Epple, drunk and without a driver's license, died from a shot by 26-year-old officer Hans Jörg Geigis through the rear window. An investigation decided that the police response was in line with protocol and no one was charged. Geigis later committed suicide with his sidearm in the 1980s.[82] |
1972-03-02 | Weisbecker, Thomas | 23 | Augsburg | Bayern | Member of the 2 June Movement. Weisbecker was shot by police officers during an arrest attempt. The incident's details are unclear.[83] |
1972-03-27 | N.N. | Bremen | Bremen | A burglar was shot by police.[76] | |
1972-04-30 | Braun, Burkhard | 25 | Gießen | Hessen | A police officer shot a suspected car thief in the neck.[84] |
1972-05-18 | N.N. | 16 | Landau | Rheinland-Pfalz | A teenage apprentice was shot by police.[76] |
1972-06-25 | Torquil Macleod, Iian James | 34 | Stuttgart | Baden-Württemberg | The Federal Criminal Police Office incorrectly identified Iian Macleod (also Ian McLeod), a British citizen from Scotland, as a supporter of the RAF and launched a raid on his apartment in Asemwald. When the officers were about to force open the bedroom door, Macleod, who had been asleep until then, opened the door, screamed upon seeing the armed officers, and then shut it again. The head of the raid team fired two shots through the closed door, hitting Macleod in the back and killing him.[85][86][87] |
1972-07-04 | Duifhuis, Paul Theodor | 24 | Duisburg | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A police patrol attempted to stop Theo Duifhuis (also Theo Doifhuis) for a traffic violation, causing him to flee. When he was eventually stopped and ordered to raise his hands by police officer Werner Terholt, he took his hand from a pocket and was shot, because the officer felt threatened.[88][89] |
1972-09-06 | Hamid, Afif Ahmed | Fürstenfeldbruck | Bayern | Munich massacre: During 1972 Olympic Games, eight members of the Black September Organization stormed the Olympic Village quarters of the Israeli Olympic team, killing two people and taking the remaining nine hostage. The terrorists demanded the release of hundreds of detainees from Israeli prison for their safety. Negotiations and a rescue effort at the village failed. Police attempted to secure the hostages at Fürstenfeldbruck airfield as their captors were there for a getaway plane, but the ensuing shootout resulted in the deaths of five of the terrorists by police marksmen, and the deaths of all the hostages and one police officer by the BSO militants. Three of the terrorists were arrested, but exchanged for the hostages of the Lufthansa Flight 615 hijacking a month later. | |
Thaa, Ahmed Chic | |||||
Afif, Luttif | 27 or 35 | ||||
Jawad, Kahlid | 18 | ||||
Nazzal, Yusuf | 35 | ||||
1972-11-25 | Widera, Viktor | 58 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | On 24 November, a man dressed up as a cleaner entered Frankfurt Airport and loitered on the airfield. Coincidentally, an Air Canada DC‐8 bound for Montréal and Toronto was being emptied of passengers after a female passenger made a complaint about "suspicious looks" of other occupants and demanded all luggage be searched. Using the opportunity, the man rushed aboard and ordered the crew to leave the plane at gunpoint with a revolver, taking 31-year-old stewardess Margit Sommer as a hostage. During the 24-hour stand-off, the hostage-taker demanded the release of all Czechoslovakian spies, German anarchist and communist terrorists, Lubomir Adamica, who was the ringleader of the 1972 Slov-Air hijacking , well as for "the bells of the Frankfurt Cathedral to be rung", otherwise threatening to blow up the plane. He was shot in the heart by SEK forces, to the applause of onlookers. It was noted that the perpetrator had a history of mental illness, had no known political activities and, contrary to initial assumptions and reports, was not of Czech origin (he was born in Beuthen, Upper Silesia which is now Poland).[90][91][92][93][94] |
1972-11-29 | Didwilier, Fritz | 48 | Waiblingen | Baden-Württemberg | A burglar was fatally shot by police while his 18-year-old accomplice was heavily injured.[84] |
1972-11-29 | N.N. | Usingen | Hessen | A man suspected of theft was shot near the upper reaches of the Usa after a prolonged pursuit. |
1973
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1973-02-04 | Hübner, Heinz-Dieter | 18 | Söhlde | Niedersachsen | 28-year-old police officer Karl-Heinz Kropp was dispatched to Nettlingen to expel a drunk customer from a pub where he had been previously banned for a brawl. After the man refused to leave before he finished his beer, Kropp hit the man in the arm with his gun, then shoved the barrel in his abdomen, during which a fatal discharge occurred.[89] |
1973-02-16 | N.N. | Frankfurt | Hessen | An Italian guest worker was shot and killed by police.[76] | |
1973-02-12 | Stülper, Manfred | 24 | Radevormwald | Nordrhein-Westfalen | During an attempted arrest of a serial burglar in Hagen, the suspect opened fire on the two dispatched policemen with a revolver, hitting 34-year-old police officer Manfred Tophoven in the upper arm, grazing the chest of 22-year-old officer Wolfgang Ritz as well as injuring his own mother. The offender escaped in his car over B229, taking Tophoven with him as a hostage at gunpoint. Despite Tophoven telling his partner to not pursue them, police surrounded the vehicle at a red light. As Tophoven attempted to dissuade his colleagues from approaching, the burglar fatally shot his hostage four times in the back. The kidnapper died at a hospital after being struck by two shots in the chest and throat by police.[55][95] |
1973-03-02 | L., Günter | 17 | Stuttgart | Baden-Württemberg | A teenage suspect was shot in the back by officer N. Weckbach during a foot chase. |
1973-04-30 | Frank, Rudolf "Rudi" | 14 | Eschwege | Hessen | A teenager took his father's car for a nightly joyride with friends, after which a police car engaged in pursuit of the vehicle for crossing several red lights. The car passed numerous blockades, once nearly hitting an officer who jumped out of the path, while the passengers threw unspecified explosive devices and a molotov cocktail. After several verbal commands and warning shots failed, officer Hans-Peter Hofmann shot the car's driver twice in the head as it approached another road block, fatally injuring him. The surviving teenagers were charged with civil disorder while the boy's parents unsuccessfully attempted to get Hofmann tried for manslaughter.[96] |
1973-05-31 | Lehmann, Anton | 53 | Heidelberg | Baden-Württemberg | Police were called over a dispute between a pub owner and customer who had come to buy a crate of beer for his mother's birthday, but didn't want to pay for bottle deposit. The owner's mother then threatened the customer and his son with a pizzle whip. The father-son pair damaged the interior and beat both women up in response. Five officers were sent to the family home, wielding batons at the ready, and fought with the man and three of his sons, all armed with wooden boards or spades, who shouted insults at them. A bystander reportedly fired a gas pistol at the scuffle to assist the officers. The fight ended when 8 shots were fired by a 23-year-old injured police officer, striking the father 4 times while the others struck his sons. The shooting was deemed self-defense and the sons were given sentences of up to 2 years imprisonment for assault. An investigation in 2020 showed that the family was regularly discriminated against by locals due to their Sinti Romani heritage and had regular run-ins with the law for defamation and assault. The deceased, who had survived internment at Auschwitz-Birkenau, had called the police officers "Nazi swine", apparently because the pub owner's mother had previously told him, "Ihr dreckigen Zigeuner gehört vergast" ("You filthy gypsies should be gassed").[44][97] |
1973-08-21 | Dobhardt, Erich | 17 | Dortmund | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A homeless teenager who had previously evaded arrest for multiple thefts was shot in the back by 31-year-old police officer Rolf Diehl while he ran from police for stealing a portable radio. Diehl was charged with negligent homicide and sentenced to six months imprisonment and probation in May 1975. On 2 November 1973, members of the Red Army Faction named the first building they illegally occupied in Dortmund after the victim.[98][99] |
1973-08-27 | N.N. | 30 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A drunk man was shot and killed by police.[76] |
1973-08-31 | Dicknöther, Herbert | 21 | Erbach | Hessen | [76] |
1973-11-12 | Gewitsch, Horst | 21 | Reutlingen | Baden-Württemberg | [76] |
1973-12-17 | N.N. | 38 | Salzgitter | Niedersachsen | A Turkish guest worker was shot and killed by police.[76] |
1973-12-27 | Vast, Hans Peter | 25 | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | On 21 December, a known petty criminal was caught attempting to steal a car while drunk. While in custody at JVA Mannheim, the man made constant and loud requests for headache medicine, for which the on-duty officer punched him in the face. When he continued to make noise, the officer called in two other officers, who had become intoxicated on their break, and together, they beat the prisoner with punches, batons and a key ring used as a makeshift brass knuckle. The officers then cleaned the cell of blood and replaced broken furnishing, after which they hid the unconscious man under the bed in his cell. He died approximately three hours later, having choked on vomit and been restricted in his movements due to his debilitating, although not fatal, injuries and cramped position under the bed. The investigation for joint venture in attempted homicide and joint manslaughter was halted in June, but the death was explicitly labeled "neither by accident, suicide, or by proxy". The instigating officer, 43-year-old Oswald "Otto" Meisch, committed suicide while detained, after confessing to the details of the death. His suicide note claimed that he had "lost his nerves then, again today".[100][101] |
1974
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1974-01-06 | N.N. | Olpe | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A woman called police because her husband was threatening her with a pistol. The man injured one of the officers with a gunshot during the confrontation and was fatally shot in return.[55] | |
1974-03-XX | N.N. | 33 | München | Bayern | A suspected car thief was shot and killed by two special officers after a shootout.[102] |
1974-04-18 | Martin-Gonzales, Emilio Humberto | 28 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A young Colombian student was robbing a bank in the city of Hamburg , took hostages and fatally shot 34-year-old police officer Uwe Faden. After negotiations, he attempted to escape in a car given to him by the police. When exiting the bank with a hostage, a knife pressed to his throat, a police officer, who had hiding in a corner next to the entrance, shot the robber in the head from behind at close range in the first recorded instance of a planned "fatal shot".[103] |
1974-05-21 | Jendrian, Günther | 24 | München | Bayern | In search of a wanted felon, plain-clothed masked police officers raided a Maxvorstadt apartment on Adalbertstraße. Police shot through Jendrian's apartment door and walls before entering. It is reported that Jendrian had reached for his smallbore rifle and was shot because of this. A 24-year-old Romanian tenant was almost struck by a ricochet. It turned out he was mistaken for 23-year-old Roland Otto, a serial bank robber and 2 June movement affiliate through Werner Sauber. Whether he recognized the intruders as police officers is unclear.[104][105] |
1974-06-05 | Routhier, Günter | 45 | Essen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Routhier, an early retired man, was a visitor at a court hearing. After disturbances, the room was cleared by police officers, carrying Routhier down a stair hall. During this, his head hit the wall and floor. He died two weeks later on 18 June from intercranial bleedings.[106] |
1974-07-17 | Remiszko, Hans-Jürgen | 23 | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | A man was asked for personal documents by three plainclothed officers of the newly established MEK while celebrating his birthday next night at a disco in Käfertal. Because the officers, who were dressed as rockers, would not provide police identification, he assumed they were trying to lure him into a mugging and called for help. Two officers 28 year-old Johann Kastner and 24-year-old Wolfgang Scholl, immediately pulled out their weapons and fired six shots shortly after, mortally wounding the man with two and the remaining ones heavily injuring his 28-year-old friend and 32-year-old onlooker, the former with a life-threatening stomach shot. An ambulance arrived only 30 minutes later, by which point the man had already died of blood loss. Police cited self-defense, claiming that the deceased had grabbed an officer's gun, put it to his head and threatened to shoot, and that the injured were part of roughly 40 rockers that had attacked them. Kastner put the deceased's mother on trial on 29 March 1977 for slander and fined 50 DM. The 2021 crime novel "Kaliszko, Mannheim im Sommer 1974" and its protagonist was loosely based on the killing.[107] |
1974-07-XX | Hoffmann, Blasius | München | Bayern | Residents called police because a neighbour was firing a gun from his balcony. Officers stormed the apartment and fatally shot the tenant, who had been using a gas pistol.[108] | |
1974-07-XX | L., Michael | 29 | München | Bayern | A burglar attempted to flee after an arrest and was fatally shot as a result. The killing was later deemed "accidental" in nature.[102][108] |
1974-08-01/30 | Wresnick, Dieter | Minden | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A robber was killed by two shots in the torso after he had non-fatally shot a female clerk and a police officer.[55] |
1975
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1975-01-15 | Wiesneth, Ernst | 18 | München | Bayern | A teenager from Taufkirchen drove his parents' car without a licence and engaged in a car chase after refusing to stop for a police check. When he eventually came to a stop, he locked himself in his car, which led the officer 32-year-old Peter Presse, to believe that the teenager was a wanted criminal. Presse, who had previously received a 150 DM reward for proactive behavior, subsequently broke the car's side window with the barrel of his gun, supposedly shouting "Komm heraus, du Schwein" ("Get out of there, you pig"), then fired two shots into the vehicle. Presse later claimed that he opened fire because the occupant had "reached towards his knee area". He was charged and sentenced to nine months probation for negligent homicide.[109][110] |
1975-02-20 | Papadopoulos, Adam | 61 | Rüsselsheim | Hessen | A Greek migrant worker caught burglars at his beverage storage and chased after them with a gun, firing several shots. This alerted a passing police car with two plainclothed officers inside, whom the worker falsely assumed were accomplices. Due to the ambiguous situation, officers opened fire on the worker when he made a sudden turning motion, striking him in the chest.[111] |
1975-03-01 | Heisterberg, Horst | Hannover | Niedersachsen | [76] | |
1975-03-16 | Rohs, Manfred | 25 | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A woman called police because her boyfriend was drunk and trashing their apartment at a homeless shelter in Vingst. Two police officers ordered the man to give himself up and fired multiple shots when he pointed a defective and unloaded .45 Navy Colt at them.[112] |
1975-04-07 | N.N. | Nürnberg | Bayern | A burglar was about to be arrested after exiting a store near Nürnberg Hauptbahnhof when he pulled out a gun and fatally shot one of the officers, 36-year-old Johannes Schauss. In the subsequent scuffle, the burglar was also shot and killed. | |
1975-05-09 | Sauber, Werner | 29 | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Swiss member of the 2 June Movement. When he and two other terrorists got into a police control, they opened fire on the police, killing officer Walter Pauli . During the shootout, he was hit and later died on the way to the hospital. |
1975-05-26 | N.N. | 25 | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | Police shot and killed an unarmed burglar whom they caught in the act inside a restaurant.[113] |
1975-07-12 | Sayin, Mustafa | 31 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | A plainclothed police officer shot two Turkish guest workers from around 4 meters distance. One of the men died after three days in a hospital from three gunshots to the heart while the other, Ferhat Coban, survived after 15 days in critical condition from six gunshots. The officer claimed he was approached by a group of men who "offered him a woman and tried to shake him down for 20 DM" and that he opened fire when the men attacked him for declining. The Union of Workers from Turkey cited an account by two other Turkish workers, who allege that they saw the officer run up behind their colleagues and hitting one before pulling out a gun and shooting at those involved. After the man was identified as a police officer, backup spent 45 minutes photographing the scene before calling an ambulance for the injured.[113] |
1975-11-01 | O'Neal, M.C. | Walldorf | Baden-Württemberg | An African-American U.S. Army soldier stationed in at the United States Army Garrison Heidelberg was caught in a drug deal sting operation, but managed to flee as a police officer shot and missed him. The next morning, when American military police and West German police stormed his apartment, the soldier appeared in a hallway with a gun in his hand and was immediately shot in the head by a German policeman. The weapon was identified as a gas pistol.[113] | |
1975-11-05 | N.N. | 50 | Schwäbisch Hall | Baden-Württemberg | A mentally ill farmer was shot by police in his house after he beat his aunt to death and heavily injured both his sisters.[113] |
1975-11-15 | Fuchs, Willy | 39 | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Police were conducting a stake-out operation at an apartment in Innenstadt, following a hostage situation that took place there. A known criminal had overpowered and tied up an acquaintance, stolen papers to his car and briefly left, during which time the hostage managed to flee and call police. When the suspect returned, he fired a shot that missed the officers and proceeded to hide in a cabinet, from where he continued to threaten police with his weapon. An officer fired 19 shots at the closet, killing the occupant.[114][113] |
1975-11-30 | Tatzko, Christian | 21 | München | Bayern | Five men were driving a stolen car and caught the attention of police when they crashed into a streetlight. A large-scale search with several response units and police dogs arrested three within a short time, leaving only two offenders on the run. Officer Martin Tolksdorf found one of the car thieves and claimed to have given a warning shot before firing two aimed shots when he saw the man reach into his jacket pocket. It was determined, however, that the deceased was shot from behind, with the remaining thief, who witnessed the shooting, claiming that the officer shouted a command to stop and fired the shots simultaneously while still running.[109][115] |
1975-12-11 | Önler, Vahit | 33 | Kornwestheim | Baden-Württemberg | A Turkish migrant worker was arrested for causing a moped accident and was slated for deportation after it was found his residency permit was about to expire. As he was being escorted out of a holding cell to a local court, he threatened the officer with a concealed glass shard and fled on foot. The escapee was caught by an uniformed and a plainclothed officer, and when he raised his arms in surrender, the plainclothed officer fired three shots, two hitting the man in the chest. Both officers left to get backup, leaving the worker to die of blood loss. The scene was not secured and no charges were made.[116] |
1975-XX-XX | N.N. | 24 | München | Bayern | Police arrived at the apartment of a truck driver to arrest him for causing and leaving the scene of a car accident. Officers shot the man after he reportedly charged at police with a "long, shiny object" in his hand, later confirmed to be a spoon.[109] |
1975-XX-XX | N.N. | Records compiled by historians Albrecht Funk and Falco Werkentin , as well as jurist Rainer Buchert listed a minimum of 15 fatal police shootings taking place in 1975. |
1976
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1976-01-02 | Breyer, Stephan | 19 | Hamburg | Hamburg | Police were in an extended stand-off with an armed robber who had broken into a bank. There were no hostages and the surrounding area had been evacuated by police. The robber was killed during a gunfight with MEK after he emerged from the entrance and fired several shots with a 4 mm handgun.[113][117][118] |
1976-03-19 | N.N. | 36 | Mosbach | Baden-Württemberg | A mentally ill man was threatening his parents with an axe at the family home. Responding medical and police services were similarly threatened and after tear gas failed, the man was shot.[117] |
1976-03-24 | N.N. | 35 | Münchhausen | Hessen | Police attempted to arrest a wanted man convicted of assault and unlawful possession of firearms at his parents' house. He was shot after pointing a gun at the officers.[117] |
1976-04-16 | N.N. | Bonn | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A youth was shot and killed by police.[76] | |
1976-04-22 | N.N. | 29 | Friedrichshafen | Baden-Württemberg | A man was threatening to kill his wife and child with a knife at a camping site. While police surrounded his tent, officers fired on the man after he non-fatally stabbed his child.[117][119] |
1976-05-07 | Sippel, Fritz | 22 | Dreieich | Hessen | A girl wrongly identified a man in a group of five at a lake in Sprendlingen as an exhibitionist in a police call. During an attempted arrest of the man, two of his friends started a shootout with six police officers which ended with one officer dead from shots in the neck and stomach and the group, later linked to the RAF, on the run. Two known criminals were arrested two weeks later, one of whom admitted to being a RAF affiliate and acknowledged having been the man being arrested, but did not identify the other arrested suspect as one of the shooters, with both being cleared of homicide charges when forensic analysis revealed that the officer had been accidentally shot by a colleague, 23-year-old Rolf Korol. His death is still counted as a killing by the RAF since his death involved their members and typically not ascribed to police.[120][121] |
1976-06-20 | Damrijanovic, Stevica | 26 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | A man fled police when a routine traffic stop revealed that he was carrying forged documents. After being apprehended at a bar, he injured a police officer with a broken beer glass and was shot after again attempting escape.[117][122] |
1976-06-26 | N.N. | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | A man was shot and killed by police.[76] | |
1976-12-26 | N.N. | 56 | Herzebrock | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A former forester threatened a group of teenagers in Oelde with a gun because they were trying to stop him from driving drunk. The man then shot at arriving police and fled back home by car, where he was shot by police when he attempted to open fire again.[123] |
1977
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1977-02-05 | Linden, Hans Georg | 19 | Nürburg | Rheinland-Pfalz | During a biker meet-up at Nürburgring, which part of the annual Elefantentreffen motorcycle rally, a plainclothed officer tried to break up a group of around 20 people engaged in a scuffle inside a festival tent, using pepper spray on the crowd before leaving the scene. When he returned, the bikers recognised him and engaged in melee for agitating them, unaware that he was a police officer. Two shots were fired in self-defense, striking an uninvolved teenager nearby. Police initially reported that the deceased was part of the group that attacked the policeman and reported that he had been tested positively for alcohol intoxication without disclosing that the shooting had occurred during a celebration.[124][125] |
1977-02-09 | Lichtenberg, Peter | 14 | Rodenbach | Hesse | Five teenagers were making loud noise while playing inside of an unfinished apartment building. Neighbours alerted the police after they hear screaming. Two officers and their police dog searched the place, during which three of the teens stayed on the upper floor while two, a teenage couple, ran downstairs to flee over a balcony. 25-year-old officer Jürgen Löcher (or Lorcher) was about to walk to the balcony when the teenage boy shut the door on him, hoping to get more time to escape. The officer fired from a distance of one to three meters, hitting the teenager. The bullet pierced his aorta, bounced from a spinal vertebrae and became stuck near the liver. He died a day later at a hospital, where his last words were reportedly "Darf denn die Polizei auf Kinder schießen?" ("Can the police shoot at children?") to his girlfriend. The officers were acquitted of all charges.[126] |
1977-02-28 | Batos, Joannis | 26 | Dortmund | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Attendees of a carnival Rosenmontag party called emergency services because a guest had approached the group and told them that he was "putting an end to it, I took 40 pills" ("Ich mache Schluss, ich habe 40 Tabletten genommen"). Despite the group asking for an ambulance and reiterating that the man had insisted that he wasn't drunk, a squad car was sent in instead, who subsequently tried to bring him to the police station. The man resisted, due to which five officers fixated him to the ground, with witnesses stating that the arrest left him with cuts and bruises. He died during the night inside a jail cell from an overdose of sleeping pills he had ingested earlier. Police initially reported that the Greek electrician had been heavily intoxicated and choked to death on his own vomit, with the station's coroner attesting that the deceased's mouth and stomach cavity smelled of alcohol, despite tests showing that his blood alcohol level were zero.[127] |
1977-04-13 | Schlaudraff, Helmut | 43 | Lahn | Hessen | A sheep farmer driving on B49 from Idstein to Wetzlar was mistaken for a sheep thief by police due to overlapping, faulty intel. Unmarked patrol vehicles followed the farmer without his knowledge before forcing his truck off the road. A plainclothed officer then walked up to the vehicle, threw open the door and shot the driver in the neck, killing him instantly.[128][129] This drastic measure was explained due the officers being informed that the farmer was "known to police", with the communication failing to specify that this meant that he had previously contacted police over stolen sheep. The officer in question was sentenced to three months probation.[117] |
1977-04-22 | Dresler/Dräsler, Eberhard | 28 | Solingen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Two armed men carjacked a motorist and passenger. During a subsequent shootout with police, one of the kidnappers was shot and killed.[117][128] |
1977-05-09 | Linnemann | 62 | Wahmbeck | Niedersachsen | During a police raid on a home, two police officers sprayed the mother of the household with chemical mace, causing her death by asphyxiation.[130] |
1977-05-28 | Nöhling, Peter | 31 | West Berlin | Berlin | A robbery attempt targeting a Metro office was thwarted by two passing police officers. As the robber shot at police, an employee restrained the robber. The police continued shooting, leading to the death of the robber and the employee and another officer being wounded.[128] |
1977-06-27 | Al Halawani, Walid | 37 | West Berlin | Berlin | A Jordanian man was being shadowed by plainclothed police because he was suspected of planning a robbery with two other men. Police officer Lindenblatt tailed the suspect's car and tried to arrest the suspect on a street in Zehlendorf. The man reached for his breast pocket, causing Lindenblatt to fire one shot in the suspect's upper arm, causing his death. The pocket was found to contain a stiletto knife.[128] |
1977-07-05 | Schlichting, Gustav | 34 | Bochum | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Police were called after reports came in that Gustav Schlichting of Wattenscheid was damaging his mother's pub with an excavator from his construction company while under the influence of alcohol. By the time two officers arrived, the argument had been resolved by neighbours. Upon seeing the police, Schlichting became agitated and fought both officers in a fistfight inside the pub, leaving all involved bloodied and bruised. According to the family lawyer, after the younger officer retreated back to the squad car, the older of the pair, 38 year-old Dieter Haarmann, who had responded to previous calls involving Schlichting, appeared to follow suit. Schlichting then grabbed a broom and drunkenly waved it in the officers direction in a gesture of anger and mockery. Haarmann proceeded to walk past the car, unholstered his Walther PPK and suddenly turned around, firing one round, hitting Schlichting in the chest, fatally piercing his lungs. Haarmann was charged with involuntary manslaughter.[131] |
1977-07-24 | Pollaczek, Rudolf | 17 | Herne | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A teenage general labourer had been thrown out of the house after a drunken argument with his brother. The family called police when the teenager continued to yell at his brother from the courtyard while wielding a knife, threatening to cut the tires of his brother's car. Two officers were sent in, before another two came as backup and later testified they had tried to engage in "amicable talk" when the teenager either lunged at the officers or threatened to do so. He was fatally shot in the left eye by officer Dieter Ahlfänger.[131] |
1977-07-XX | N.N. | Schwerte | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A foreign migrant worker died from blunt head trauma in police custody. Police ascribed the death to an accidental fall. | |
1977-08-06 | Kirmizi, Sadat | 20 | München | Bayern | A Turkish migrant worker headed for Garmisch was accidentally shot in the head after a traffic stop for speeding. Despite the ruling, the officer claimed that the man had reached for his gun, apparently after tripping, and thus caused the discharge.[128][132][109] |
1977-09-26 | N.N. | 16 | Walsrode | Niedersachsen | A teenager previously known for youth delinquency was shot while attempting to flee from authorities after a botched burglary.[128] |
1977-10-14 | N.N. | 18 | Seesen | Niedersachsen | At a court hearing, the defendant attempted escape from the building. A judicial officer attempted to stop him, claiming that he was aiming for the defendant's legs, but he was instead fatally shot in the torso.[117] |
1977-10-28 | N.N. | Kaiserslautern | Rheinland-Pfalz | A bank robber was shot nine times while fleeing from authorities after he pulled out a gun during the chase.[117] | |
1977-10-18 | Harb, Nabil | 23 | Mogadishu | Somalia | Members of the PFLP. The three hostage takers were shot by GSG 9 officers during the liberation of the hijacked Lufthansa Flight 181.[133][134] |
Duaibes Yousouf, Nadja Shehadah | 22 | ||||
Akache, Zohair Youssif | 23 | ||||
1977-11-02 | Heitkämper, H.J. | 33 | Dortmund | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A bank robber was shot during a hostage situation after dousing a female employee in ethanol and threatening to set her on fire.[135] |
1977-11-02 | Rescher, Udo Rolf | 33 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | A man was identified as a wanted burglar during a security check of his person. The man pulls out a gun and attempts to shoot the officer conducting the check, leading to a fire exchange that ends with the man fatally shot.[136] |
1977-11-04 | N.N. | 20 | Bonn | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Two GSG 9 officers posted outside the villa property of foreign minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher in Gronau mishandled their weapons by playing a game of quick draw, leading to a misfire that killed one of the officers.[137] |
1977-11-10 | Kronthaler | Langweid | Bayern | During an attempt to seize several firearms from a gun collector, two officers were injured when the owner fired at them with a revolver before other officers were able to shoot him.[117][138] | |
1977-12-10 | S., Alfred | 25 | Königsbronn | Baden-Württemberg | A wanted man resisted arrest from a taskforce inside his apartment. After producing a handgun and firing a shot, the officers returned fire and killed the offender.[117][139] |
1978
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978-01-07 | Beinert, Klaus | 24 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | During a physical argument inside a stairwell, 50-year-old police officer Karl Eppstein, who was intoxicated at the time, shot an automechanic in Riederwald out visiting friends after feeling that his "peace had been disturbed". Eppstein later denied being drunk, instead alleging that the automechanic had been and that his death was self-defense. Further investigation was suspended.[117][128][140][141][142] |
1978-02-18 | N.N. | 37 | Aachen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A 31-year-old policeman accidentally shot an innkeeper during a taxi inspection.[117][128] |
1978-03-30 | Reuker, Walter | 23 | Limburg | Hessen | Two burglars were caught during a kiosk break-in. When two police officers ordered the men to exit the hut with their hands up, one of the burglars shot and injured 31-year-old officer Wolfgang Lieber, who returned fire and hit the shooter in the left hand and chest, killing him. The remaining 19-year-old burglar surrendered after back-up arrived and a warning shot was fired, which hit him in the hand while a third 20-year-old accomplice acting as a getaway driver was arrested nearby. Lieber died of his injuries the same day at a hospital. The deceased from Hundsangen had a long criminal record and was a suspected serial burglar and robber.[117][143][144] |
1978-04-08 | Müller, Klaus | 34 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A bank robber was shot after escaping the scene with a taxi and holding a police officer hostage. It was discovered that the robber was using a gas pistol.[117] |
1978-04-XX | N.N. | Krefeld | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A police officer shot and killed his father-in-law.[128] | |
1978-08-15 | Liebig, Heinrich | 29 | Darmstadt | Hessen | Police were called to a domestic incident involving a woman and her child being harassed by her separated husband. Upon their arrival, the husband threatened to kill his child with a knife, leading to an altercation between him and two officers, during which a police sidearm discharged and killed the husband.[117][145] |
1978-09-06 | Stoll, Willy Peter | 28 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Member of the RAF. Willy Peter Stoll was visiting a restaurant when he was recognized by another guest, who then informed the police. Several police units surrounded the building. Two officers in plain clothes entered the restaurant, pretending to order a meal. When they confronted him, he tried to reach for his gun and was shot four times. He died before reaching the hospital.[146] |
1978-10-08 | Knoll, Michael | 21 | Dortmund | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Member of the RAF. Michael Knoll and two other RAF terrorists, Angelika Speitel and Werner Lotze who were practising shooting in a forest when staggered by the police. In the ensuing shootout, Knoll was injured and died two weeks later. Police officer Hans-Wilhelm Hansen also suffered fatal injuries.[147] |
1978-10-19 | Leupold, Peter | 31 | Amberg | Bayern | As police attempted to arrest a man in his apartment, he began threatening the officers with a gas pistol through a locked door. Police shot through the door and killed the man.[117][148] |
1978-11-17 | Böttrich, Ulf | 33 | Soltau | Niedersachsen | A truck driver unknowingly attempted to leave an area under police observation. When he exited his vehicle, an officer claimed his submachine gun accidentally discharged, hitting the truck driver, who died from his injuries in December.[117][149] |
1978-12-18 | N.N. | 23 | München | Bayern | An inmate managed to grab a judicial officer's pistol and beat him to the ground with it. A firefight ensued when other judicial officers responded, eventually fatally wounding the inmate.[117][150] |
1979
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1979-01-31 | Kontsoudopoulos, Athanasios | 22 | Hamburg/Wentorf bei Hamburg | Hamburg/Schleswig-Holstein | A burglar armed with a handgun was shot 16 times at the scene of the break-in. The number of shots was explained due to darkness.[117][151] |
1979-02-02 | Odinzow, Wladimir Iwanowitsch | 18 | Seeburg | Bezirk Potsdam | Volkspolizei were conducting a manhunt for an armed Soviet Army deserter, who was likely heading for West Berlin. The same night, two officers spotted a Soviet soldier walking in direction of the border and fired a warning shot after he did not react to a command in Russian. A second warning shot caused the soldier to duck into the snow, at which point he followed most of the officers' commands to walk towards them and show them the inside of his uniform. When the soldier again ran, this time away from the border, the superior of the officers ordered the other to open fire, fatally striking the soldier in the back. It turned out that the deceased was a different off-duty soldier, reportedly to go drinking at the border village. The actual deserter was caught a few hours later.[152] |
1979-02-21 | Hoffmann, Erwin | 43 | Bamberg | Bayern | Police approached two suspected thieves for an arrest when one brandished an iron bar at them. A warning shot was fired and after the thief did not desist, he was fatally shot twice.[117][153] |
1979-04-30 | Drindl, Manfred | 27 | Landshut | Bayern | SEK shot and killed an armed bank robber during a negotiated handoff of ransom money to end a hostage situation that 100 local officers, 50 special commandos, an EHU unit, K-9 units, a psychological team and a negotiation group from Munich attended to. Officers snuck into the teller station through a back door and shot the robber from behind.[154][109] |
1979-05-04 | von Dyck, Elisabeth | 28 | Nürnberg | Bayern | Member of the RAF. Elisabeth von Dyck was shot in the back when she tried to pull out her holstered gun, after encountering police officers in her apartment.[155] |
1979-05-07 | Mettbach, Karl | 53 | Hagen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A businessman from Hamburg was under police observation since they believed that he had bought a stolen car from a friend with suspected affiliation to Romani criminal gangs; the men were Sinti and Roma respectively. Plainclothed officers had tailed the man to a visit to his friend's house, and decided to put him under arrest when he returned to the property upon realizing he was being followed. During the arrest an officer trained his gun on him to "keep him in check" and as the man was being ordered to turn around, he was shot in the forehead when the gun discharged by accident. The deceased's daughter, who was in the car during the arrest, his friend, and police officers testified that he had been compliant during the entire arrest and that the shot occurred at a distance of around 50 cm.[44][117] |
1979-05-17 | Wichert, Maximilian | 35 | München | Bayern | During an arrest, the man in question reached into his jacket pocket, and suspecting he was pulling out a weapon, the Kripo officers fatally shot him. It was determined that the man hadn't been carrying a weapon of any kind, but the death was still ruled self-defense.[117][156] |
1979-08-05 | Rabe, Wilfried | 43 | Oldenburg | Niedersachsen | Police were alerted to a supermarket after an automatic alarm system tipped them off about an ongoing break-in. As a 39-year-old officer rounded a corner to the back of the business, he encountered two men, one holding a gas pistol. The officer immediately fired three shots at the duo, hitting the unarmed man in the shoulder and fatally striking the man with the gun in the forehead. It was found that the deceased was the owner of the supermarket, who had arrived after receiving a pre-recorded message from his alarm system, shortly after police, and was looking for the burglars accompanied by his 21-year-old son, an off-duty Bremen Police officer. The "burglars" are presumed to have left the premises during the commotion, abandoning their loot, a single crate of expired beer that had been left outside for garbage pick-up, in a nearby dumpster.[117][157] |
1979-09-13 | Probst, Peter | 31 | West Berlin | Berlin | Police attempted to apprehend a bank robber in a taxi on a parking lot and fired deadly shots when he allegedly reached for his gun and threw a hand grenade at the officers.[117][158] |
1979-12-18 | Schmidt, Rainer | 29 | West Berlin | Berlin | The second-in-command of a gang of robbers nicknamed the "Hammerbande" was shot while attempting to hold up an armored bank transporter in Schöneberg and died of his wounds almost two months later on 8 February 1980. Together with his brother-in-law Klaus-Dieter L., he stole 3,2 million DM in at least eight other bank transporter robberies. L. was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment and was rearrested in 2005 for robbing another bank transporter with his adult son before being tried again in 2012 for fatally wounding a security guard during a robbery in 1992.[117][159][160][161][162] |
1979-12-18 | Waschtschenko, Wjatscheslaw | 42 | München | Bayern | A Ukrainian in-exile journalist diagnosed with schizophrenia and depression, formerly employed by the local branch of the U.S.-funded Radio Liberty, barricaded himself in his mother's apartment in Ludwigsfeld when he was supposed to be brought to a psychiatric facility in Haar, where he had been remanded to in the past. Since police noted that he had violently resisted as well as issued suicide threats during previous commitments, SEK was called in. Three officers stormed the premises and one shot the man four times because he was wielding an axe, dying at the scene.[109][163] |
1980s
[edit]1980
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1980-02-21 | Heidtmann, Kurt | 41 | Buxtehud | Niedersachsen | When police approached a man they deemed suspicious, he pulled out a pistol and opened fire, being killed by the officers in self-defense.[164][165] |
1980-02-27 | Eggebrecht, Andreas | 22 | West Berlin | Berlin | Two MEK officers overheard a fight happening inside a brothel and found two customers, a father-son pair, kicking the owner on the ground with heavy boots. The officers were then beaten by the men with metal chair legs, knocking one of them unconscious, forcing the remaining officer to use deadly force, with a stray shot injuring his downed colleague as well. The officer reportedly received death threats from friends of the deceased and went on permanent sick leave as a result.[164][166][167] |
1980-02-27 | Eggebrecht, Erwin | 47 | West Berlin | Berlin | Two MEK officers overheard a fight happening inside a brothel and found two customers, a father-son pair, kicking the owner on the ground with heavy boots. The officers were then beaten by the men with metal chair legs, knocking one of them unconscious, forcing the remaining officer to use deadly force, with a stray shot injuring his downed colleague as well. The officer reportedly received death threats from friends of the deceased and went on permanent sick leave as a result.[164][166][167] |
1980-03-17 | N.N. | 19 | Zweibrücken | Rheinland-Pfalz | An inmate took a hostage with a bladed weapon and was killed by police in what was deemed a "typical fatal shot", meaning the knowingly deadly usage of a firearm was used as no other means were available/had been exhausted.[164][168] |
1980-04-03 | Perder, Manfred | 43 | Neuss | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A VW bus with three occupants was stopped during for a road check at a scheduled checkpoint. As the vehicle was slowing down, 33-year-old police officer Peter U. fired a single shot at the car's windshield with his submachine gun, hitting the driver, an acoustic panel manufacturer from Essen, in the face, fatally piercing his spinal cord. Allegedly the driver did not stop his vehicle fast enough and the officer reacted "in a reflex motion". The officer was sentenced to seven months probation.[164][169][170] |
1980-05-04 | N.N. | 51 | München | Bayern | A burglar broke into the weekend house of a police officer and was shot dead by the owner after he threatened him with an iron bar.[164] |
1980-06-05 | N.N. | 50 | Herford | Nordrhein-Westfalen | As police attempted to apprehend a burglar, the suspect used a pistol to fire twice at the officers, who return fire, killing him. The pistol turned out to be a blank gun.[169] |
1980-06-26 | G., Ishan | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | A drug dealer was shot while he is arrested and died in custody four weeks later.[164] | |
1980-07-01 | Friebel, Peter | 39 | Würzburg | Bayern | On 30 June, a man walked into an American Express bank within the grounds of the Leighton Barracks with a concealed gun and took two hostages, 49-year-old loan officer Melvin L. Cochran and 35-year-old SFC Buddy Davis, both American nationals. A cleaning lady who had been in the basement at the time of the stick-up was able to escape. The hostage-taker, who identified himself as "Sergeant Willi Plett", was an American soldier with a German father, demanded 1.4 million U.S. dollars, a getaway vehicle and a flight to an undisclosed country from police for the hostages' safety. After 16 hours of negotiations with German police and U.S. Army officials, the robber was shot by a SEK sniper. Both hostages were left unharmed, with Cochran, an Ozark, Alabama native, remaining in Würzburg and Davis returning to Salt Lake City. Major General Sam Wetzel had given the go-ahead for the marksman to fire on the robber.[164][171][172][173] |
1980-09-07 | N.N. | 46 | Bremen | Bremen | A jurist with a known history of mental illness and violence was shot after he non-fatally stabbed a police officer.[164] |
1980-10-03 | Moysiszik, Detlef | 19 | Aachen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Eight police officers were involved in a sting operation after being tipped off about a planned jewelry robbery. A 21-year-old accomplice had informed the authorities of the crime five hours in advance and the fact that he and the other perpetrator would be armed with harmless gas pistols, for which he received lenience for violating parole and a 100 DM reward. Six plainclothed officers monitored the scene as the robber and the accomplice entered the empty store, where two uniformed officers were to perform the arrest. The robber was instead once shot in the chest moments after police revealed themselves. The 36-year-old officer was put on trial as there was no dangerous situation that would have warranted deadly force but he was later cleared of all charges.[169][174] |
1980-10-24 | Marx, Dietmar | West Berlin | Berlin | Two police officers gained entry to the home of a man who had a warrant out for his arrest and waited for him to return. The arrest was bungled when the officers shot another man who entered under unclear circumstances; the man was not the home owner they were expecting. The officer who fired the killing shots was ordered by the court to pay a fine of 4000 DM.[164] | |
1980-12-22 | Golombek, Werner Karl | 41 | Hanau | Hessen | A police officer killed the alleged lover of his unfaithful wife.[175] |
1980-12-31 | Schroer, Rolf | 31 | Saarbrücken | Saarland | A miner's wife called the police as she felt threatened by her husband. Upon arrival, the husband attacked the officers, who then fatally shot him.[164] |
1981
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1981-01-23 | Köhler, Wilfried | 32 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Two police officers found a man who did not return after his prison furlough helping his wife move out of her apartment. When the man threatened suicide with a knife, the police deployed tear gas, at which point the man attempted to flee and was fatally shot. The officer in question was initially charged with negligent homicide, but ended up being relieved of all charges.[169] |
1981-03-18 | Schecke, Uwe | 30 | Bielefeld | Nordrhein-Westfalen | In a case of mistaken identity, a printer from Hamburg was falsely apprehended by police as an illegal watch dealer and during the arrest, the offending officer claimed he tripped and accidentally discharged the machine gun he was holding, killing the arrestee. The incident was labelled a "tragic case of misfortune" and the officers weren't charged.[169] |
1981-06-15 | Berger, Alfons | 37 | Ludwigsmoos | Bayern | A man was shot by police when he exited a house that was under observation while holding a long metal object. Said object was found to be a loaded hunting rifle, but as it was wrapped in plastic, it could not have been fired in its current state.[164][176] |
1981-06-25 | Kruggel, Ruth | 52 | Rosenheim | Bayern | A mentally ill housewife shot and killed a police officer and proceeded to shoot several more before she was killed by special commando forces.[164][177] |
1981-08-14 | Stolz, Dirk | 27 | Saarbrücken | Saarland | A motorist tried to avoid a traffic stop and was subsequently shot by attending police. The officer in question was tried for manslaughter, but found not guilty on grounds of self-defense.[164][178] |
1981-09-12 | N.N. | 53 | Troisdorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A locksmith and hobby gardener was shot five times after a patrol officer came to "see if everything was right" on the gardener's allotment. The gardener had refused the officer entry and tried to forcefully eject him from the property. The officer states that a "threat scenario" had arisen when the gardener pointed his spade at him, forcing him to use deadly force. The gardener died at a hospital and the charges against the officers were dropped due to a lack of witnesses.[169] |
1981-09-29 | Neu, E. | 45 | West Berlin | Berlin | A motorist sped off during a traffic stop and was shot after he had brought the vehicle to a halt. The officer was found guilty of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to 6 months including probation and a fine of 6000 DM in the first instance and 1 year with probation in the second.[164] |
1981-10-20 | Wolfgram, Kurt | 21 | München | Bayern | In Ramersdorf-Perlach, five members of the neo-Nazi Volkssozialistische Bewegung Deutschlands/Partei der Arbeit opened fire and detonated a frag grenade as they were being arrested for planning a bank robbery, injuring one officer with shrapnel. The officers retaliated by shooting two of the gang members, during which another officer was hit by a stray bullet.[164][179] |
1981-10-20 | Uhl, Klaus Ludwig | 24 | München | Bayern | In Ramersdorf-Perlach, five members of the neo-Nazi Volkssozialistische Bewegung Deutschlands/Partei der Arbeit opened fire and detonated a frag grenade as they were being arrested for planning a bank robbery, injuring one officer with shrapnel. The officers retaliated by shooting two of the gang members, during which another officer was hit by a stray bullet.[164][179] |
1981-10-22 | Severino, V. | Schwäbisch Gmünd | Baden-Württemberg | After prolonged observation of an occupied car suspected of containing narcotics, a special officer yanked open the passenger door and fired two shots, killing the occupant and shooting himself in the hand. He was tried for manslaughter, but cleared of all charges.[164] | |
1981-10-26 | Klatt, René Douglas | 43 | Erkelenz | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A murder suspect known for being "trigger-happy" was shot and killed after attempting to escape arresting officers. An officer fired one shot, injuring the suspect, who later died from his wounds in a hospital in Neustadt an der Weinstraße a month later on 27 November .[164][169] |
1981-12-06 | N.N. | 27 | Fürth | Bayern | A bank robber was shot as he fled with the loot he had obtained with a gas pistol. The robber was given a warning shot before being gunned down.[164] |
1981-12-31 | Mardini, A. | 24 | West Berlin | Berlin | A plainclothed officer conducting a personnel check in a local bar shot and killed a man who threatened him with a knife.[164] |
1981-XX-XX | N.N. | Hamburg | Hamburg | A police officer accidentally shot and killed a sleeping man at a bar in St. Pauli.[180] |
1982
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1981-04-15 | Skrabo, Jandrio | 31 | Hofheim | Hessen | Police officers shot a Croat burglar armed with a gun after a fire exchange.[164] |
1981-04-21 | N.N. | 30 | Wesel | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A bank robber was shot after he fired at the arriving officers.[164] |
1981-05-30 | N.N. | 31 | Aachen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A driving instructor fled from authorities after refusing to stop his car. He was shot after he crashed into a patrol car.[164] |
1981-06-27 | Jungling, G. | 33 | Ortenberg | Baden-Württemberg | Police were called to the supposed site of a break-in, but the home owner denied any suspicious activity and tried to forcefully usher the officers out. During the ensuing scuffle, a police firearm discharged, killing the home owner.[164] |
1981-07-28 | N.N. | 29 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | A Gambian man was shot while holding another person at knifepoint.[164] |
1982-08-21 | N.N. | 36 | Wuppertal | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A judicial officer committed a bank robbery and held three people hostage with a machine gun. One of the hostages, an off-duty police officer, manages to shoot and kill the robber.[169] |
1982-10-12 | N.N. | 24 | Tuttlingen | Baden-Württemberg | During an attempted house search, one of the officers attempted to keep the door wedged open with his side-arm, causing it to discharge and kill the resident. The officer was found guilty of involuntary manslaugther and paid a fine of 6500 DM.[164] |
1982-11-09 | Campagna, Pio | 58 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | Two police officers entered a construction container office after they saw a figure inside to be a trespasser. The figure, really an Italian carpenter serving as the site's foreman, mistook the officers for burglars and threatened them with an axe, for which police shot and killed him. The prosecutor's office launched a probe into the death but ceased their investigation shortly after.[164][181] |
1982-11-21 | Piber, Andreas | 18 | West Berlin | Berlin | Responding to a case of attempted burglary at a second-hand shop in Schöneberg, police officer Jörg Rosentreter fatally shot the student and suspected thief in the back. Rosentreter admitted that he had done this "aimlessly" as it was dark and he was convicted of negligent homicide for which he was sentenced to a total of 3 years and 6 months.[182] |
1982-12-15 | Sander, Friedrich | 52 | Wiefelstede | Niedersachsen | A farmer is fatally shot after he threatened police with a revolver when they came to enforce a public health officer's order for involuntary commitment to a mental institution. The gun turned out to be unloaded.[164][183] |
1983
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1983-01-06 | N.N. | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A bank robber is killed in a shootout after police raid the location.[169] | |
1983-01-23 | G., Hans-Joachim | 26 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A burglar ran away from police while pointing a pistol at his pursuers. He is shot by MEK, who discover that his gun was non-operational. Public prosecution investigates, but no one is charged.[164] |
1983-02-17 | N.N. | 18 | Ditzingen | Baden-Württemberg | A robbery suspect is shot dead after he shot at Kripo officers with a gas pistol at point blank range, leading to eye loss.[164] |
1983-03-05 | Heins, Alfons "Alf" | 18 | Hamburg | Hamburg | 42-year-old plainclothed police officer Dieter Lücke spotted two teenagers on a parking lot in Lurup, shining a flashlight into cars. The pair was looking for a distinctive stereo that would identify a car that had been stolen from one, but Lücke, assuming both to be car thieves, surprised them and put both under arrest. One of them was shot in the head from a close distance, with the exact circumstances of the incident being unclear. The officer asserted that he was restraining one of the teenagers when he attempted to flee while aiming his gun at the other, during which he accidentally pulled the trigger. The surviving teenager instead claimed that the officer had roughly shoved his friend with the barrel of the gun, during which the shot was fired. It was noted either way that the deceased, having stood 1,60 m and weighing 48 kg, would not have been perceived as threatening. The officer was sentenced to two years imprisonment.[184][185][180] |
1983-03-07 | Kaiser, Joachim | 19 | Augsburg | Bayern | Three drunk teenagers drove through a pedestrian crossing in Ulrichsplatz. Police officers shot at least 22 times at the car, killing the driver. It was later determined that police fired with intent to kill after falsely concluding the occupants were firing at the officers, having mistaken a colleague's muzzle flash for an impacting bullet aimed at them. None of the police's gunshots hit the tires and one had struck the window of a nearby three-story flat.[184][186] |
1983-03-18 | Wilck, Florian | 63 | Neuss | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A retiree who was known to police for mental issues called emergency services to request a police patrol, a common occurrence. He was shot by the officers when he greeted them holding a rifle. The weapon was later found to be an air rifle.[169] |
1983-03-20 | Bergbauer, Jürgen | 14 | Gauting | Bayern | 30 year-old police officer Friedrich Konzack was on night patrol, because of an ongoing series of burglaries. The officer spotted a "young male figure", later identified as Jürgen Bergbauer, use a lit phone booth before entering a youth center and called for two officers as backup. When the figure passed by a window, the officer fired three shots, the last of which struck the teenager in the head, instantly killing him. Bergbauer had snuck away from home to attend a party and wanted to sleep at the center to avoid a confrontation with his mother. Konzack later testified he had mistaken the boy for the suspected burglar after being startled, despite having had a clear view of Bergbauer when he used the payphone and the boy standing only 150 cm (4 ft 11 in). Konzack was sentenced to 6 months probation and forced to pay a fine of 3500 DM.[184][187] |
1983-03-22 | N.N. | 43 | Übersee | Bayern | An innkeeper who had shot his girlfriend in a fit of jealousy, was killed in a gunfight he started with responding Kripo.[164] |
1983-03-29 | N.N. | 21 | Ötisheim | Baden-Württemberg | A plainclothed police patrol found that a parked car with three men inside was matched to a stolen car. The occupants fled and hid behind a stack of wood and when officers ordered them to surrender, one of the men, a Turkish man from Schwäbisch Hall, fired a gas pistol at police. Because the car thieves refused to give up, officers returned fire, hitting the shoulder of the shooter, who died at the scene.[188] |
1981-03-31 | N.N. | 50 | Darmstadt | Hessen | A man threatened police officers with a submachine gun. He was fatally shot while fleeing the scene.[189] |
1983-06-04 | N.N. | 30 | Oberhausen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Two fugitives barricaded themselves in an apartment and open fire on police. During the shootout, one SEK officer is critically injured after being shot in the neck, while one of the suspects is fatally shot.[169] |
1983-06-29 | F., Manfred | 33 | Castrop-Rauxel | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A burglar is shot by the responding officer during a break-in due to the suspect holding an unidentified object in his hand.[169] |
1983-08-03 | Hahn, Michael | 38 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A man was shot by a police patrol that had caught him attempting to break into a building. He was armed with a gas pistol.[190] |
1983-08-07 | N.N. | 52 | Bergisch Gladbach | Nordrhein-Westfalen | During a burglary at a villa, police shot the offender when he charged at the officers with a crowbar.[169] |
1983-08-25 | N.N. | 22 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Police are called to a dormitory after receiving reports of a knife-wielding masked man skulking around the courtyard. The man, a student, is shot dead when he attempts to flee.[169] |
1983-08-25 | Freundt, Gerhard | 26 | Köln-Wesseling | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A drunk cyclist collided with an off-duty policeman driving his private vehicle and carrying a private weapon. A confrontation ensues, during which the officer shot the cyclist. The officer served 8 months in prison when it was determined that he had escalated the situation by immediately taking out his gun.[191] |
1983-09-28 | Miller, Karl-Heinz | 20 | Augsburg | Bayern | A group of four men attempted a drive-by on a police officer, who was later found not to have been their intended target. Returning fire killed two of the attackers.[192] |
1983-09-28 | Miller, Peter | 19 | Augsburg | Bayern | A group of four men attempted a drive-by on a police officer, who was later found not to have been their intended target. Returning fire killed two of the attackers.[193] |
1983-09-29 | Delahaye, Karl | 40 | Alsdorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Police responded to a bank robbery. When the two robbers left the bank with two hostages, the officers opened fire on the getaway car with several weapons, including fully automatic submachine guns. Although the robbers were wearing masks and their hostages did not, the officers failed to think of the possibility of them being hostages. In the result, hostage Mertens died at the scene, hostage Delahaye one month later, bank robber Erwin Naujoks was paralyzed, and bank robber Wolfgang Vobis was severely injured.[194] |
1983-09-29 | Mertens, Alfred | 25 | Alsdorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Police responded to a bank robbery. When the two robbers left the bank with two hostages, the officers opened fire on the getaway car with several weapons, including fully automatic submachine guns. Although the robbers were wearing masks and their hostages did not, the officers failed to think of the possibility of them being hostages. In the result, hostage Mertens died at the scene, hostage Delahaye one month later, bank robber Erwin Naujoks was paralyzed, and bank robber Wolfgang Vobis was severely injured.[194] |
1983-11-02 | Behl, Peter | 25 | Hanau | Hessen | Police were called to break up a physical altercation between multiple drunk men in an apartment. One of the men is shot 12 times through the locked door after he threatened to shoot at the officers with a gun, later found to be a gas pistol.[195] |
1983-11-08 | Sahm, Hardon | 28 | Bad Wildungen | Hessen | During a routine ID check, four escaped convicts who had escaped from Villingen prison on 5 November were discovered, two of whom opened fire on police. One convict, a bank robber from Furtwangen who was described as the ringleader, is killed in the shootout, another heavily wounded, while an uninvolved child was also injured.[196][197] |
1984
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1984-01-09 | Salah, Sami | 22 | München | Bayern | Following a call reporting a bar patron threatening a bargirl with a gun, the patron was shot and killed when he threatened police with the same weapon, which was found to be a gas pistol.[198] |
1984-01-18 | N., Karl-Heinz | 40 | Hamburg | Hamburg | Plainclothed police responded to a multiple person break-in. After being surprised by the officers, one of the burglars hit an officer in the head with a hammer and is fatally shot in return.[198] |
1984-03-28 | N.N. | 32 | Eschlkam | Bayern | A farmer was resisting an alcohol test with a broom and was killed by two accidental discharges from an officer's gun during the struggle.[198] |
1984-04-01 | R., Uwe | 21 | Ravensburg | Baden-Württemberg | Police responded to a domestic incident at a private residence. A drunk man aimed a gas pistol at the officers and was shot while attempting to flee the scene.[198] |
1984-05-03 | Pfitzer, Siegfried | 47 | Marbach am Neckar | Baden-Württemberg | Victim of police officer, bank robber and serial killer Norbert Poehlke. Poehlke killed Pfitzer with a headshot from his service pistol and used his victim's car as a getaway-vehicle.[199][200] |
1984-07-01 | W., Klaus Peter | 39 | Dormagen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A drunk driver caused an accident and ran a red light in Köln. As the authorities got the driver to stop and were making him leave his vehicle, an officer's firearm went off after he was pushed by his partner. The driver was hit and killed instantly. The officer was given a fine and probation. Why the gun was pulled and pointed at the driver remains unclear.[182][198] |
1984-10-07 | F., Mike | 16 | Einbeck | Niedersachsen | Two teenage escapees from a juvenile detention facility in Greene were being pursued by police while driving a stolen car. One officer fired his submachine gun during the chase, hitting and killing one of the youths.[198] |
1984-12-21 | Wethey, Eugene Richard | 37 | Großbottwar | Baden-Württemberg | Victim of police officer, bank robber and serial killer Norbert Poehlke. Poehlke killed Wethey, an English immigrant, with a headshot from his service pistol and used his victim's car as a getaway-vehicle.[199][200] |
1984-12-27 | Karacayli, Cevat | 34 | Villingen | Baden-Württemberg | Two police officers were dispatched to an apartment building where a Turkish migrant worker was refusing to pay a postal worker an installment for a vacuum cleaner. Under unclear circumstances, the situation escalated, at which point 24-year-old officer Frank Gielser put the resident in a headlock, continuing even as the man's wife pointed out her husband's finger had turned blue from hypoxia. By the time backup arrived 15 minutes later, the officer had unintentionally strangled the suspect to death. Giesler was sentenced to one year imprisonment with probation, while his 22-year-old partner was given a monetary fine for aiding by twisting the deceased's arm.[181][201] |
1985
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1985-01-19/20 | N.N. | 37 | Oberhausen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | During a nightly home invasion, police shot a resident after being "startled"; the burglar had fled into a neighbor's house. The killing resulted in a sentence of 10 months with probation for the offending officer.[159] |
1985-03-12 | N.N. | 48 | Langquaid | Bayern | A farmer barricaded himself in his room when police came to fulfill a state order to have the farmer involuntarily committed to a psychiatric facility and after officers forced their way in, the farmer was shot dead for charging at the officers with a hatchet.[202] |
1985-03-29 | N.N. | 45 | Würzburg | Bayern | A bank robber fled into a restaurant in Pempelfort to avoid detection. Police fired on the robber when he pointed a gun at them, which was found to be a plastic toy.[159][203] |
1985-04-06 | N.N. | 25 | Northeim | Niedersachsen | A motorist attempted to escape the scene of a car crash in Sudheim. After a police vehicle stopped him and conducted a search of his person, the motorist was killed by an accidental gun discharge.[159] |
1985-04-18 | Rieger, Helmut | 33 | Ulm | Baden-Württemberg | A drunk police officer shot a fellow officer when he was about to be arrested for a hit-and-run before killing himself.[159] |
1985-05-12 | N.N. | 45 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A resident of an apartment complex threatened several other tenants with a gun before locking himself in his own flat. After forceful entry by police, the resident fired two shots from the gun, firing blanks, with the officer fatally shooting him in return.[204] |
1985-07-07 | N.N. | 28 | Saarwellingen | Saarland | A man who had murdered a roofer at a restaurant was arrested by police after a footchase. He was able to get out of his restraints and pulled out a gun, leading to the attending officers fatally shooting the offender.[159] |
1985-07-22 | Schneider, Wilfried | 26 | Ilsfeld | Baden-Württemberg | Victim of police officer, bank robber and serial killer Norbert Poehlke. Poehlke killed Schneider with a headshot from his service pistol and used his victim's car as a getaway-vehicle.[199][200] |
1985-08-04 | H., Gerhard | 60 | Langenfeld | Nordrhein-Westfalen | During an attempt to forcefully commit a man to a psychiatric facility, the man grabbed a hatchet and a knife to drive the officers back, and was shot as a result.[159] |
1985-08-06 | Minwegen, Lorenz | 56 | Düsseldorf | Nordrhein-Westfalen | After a night of heavy drinking, two police officers, 27-year-old Wolfgang Liebau and 26-year-old Ralf Voigt, strangled a fellow patron to death with a necktie in a forest bordering Hilden. The officers gave their motive as robbery, saying that the victim had frequented the same bar as the officers and often bragged about his supposed wealth. They were initially tried for murder, which was reduced to robbery resulting in death, with both receiving 13 year sentences.[169][205][206][207] |
1985-09-28 | Sare, Günter | 36 | Frankfurt | Hessen | At a demonstration the police used water cannons to diffuse the protesting crowd. Sare was hit by the water stream and injured severely when hitting the ground. He was later run over by the water cannon under unclear circumstances and died.[208] |
1985-10-13 | Poehlke, Adrian | 7 | Strümpfelbach | Baden-Württemberg | Victim of police officer, bank robber and serial killer Norbert Poehlke. Poehlke killed his older son with a headshot from his service pistol.[199][200] |
1985-10-13 | Poehlke, Ingeborg | 47 | Strümpfelbach | Baden-Württemberg | Victim of police officer, bank robber and serial killer Norbert Poehlke. Poehlke killed his wife with a headshot from his service pistol.[199][200] |
1985-10-13 | Poehlke, Gabriel | 4 | Torre Canne | Apulia, Italy | Victim of police officer, bank robber and serial killer Norbert Poehlke. Poehlke killed his younger son with a headshot from his service pistol before killing himself.[199][200] |
1985-10-20 | Wolkenstein, Klaus-Detlef | 33 | West Berlin | Berlin | In an emergency call, a suspected burglary was reported in Rudow. Two plainclothed SEK officers searched the area and found a man scaling a fence onto an industrial company near the crime scene. When the officers announced their affiliation and approached the man, he stepped back and pulled out a pocketknife. Both parties stepped back and forwards for several minutes before an officer fired four shots on the suspect. It was later found that the deceased had been extremely short-sighted and been drunk from a company party, where he had forgotten his glasses. Investigators presume that he tried to return to the pub the party was held and got lost. Because he could not be certain of the officers' identities due to his poor eyesight, the deceased assumed they were lying about their identities and instead trying to mug him, hence the knife.[182] |
1986
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1986-01-21 | N.N. | 20-25 | Würzburg | Bayern | A young man robbed a gun store, getting away with two pistols. Upon being apprehended by two officers, the man opened fire, hitting one officer through the leg, while the other shot him dead.[209] |
1986-01-27 | Kureck, Udo | 26 | Hemmingen | Niedersachsen | A man was vandalising the front yard of a house at night. After being confronted and shot at by the armed homeowner, he ran past him through the unlocked door and hid in the building's cellar, arming himself with a shotgun that was stored there. After the home owner's wife and two children were brought out, SEK surrounded the cellar entrance and tried to negotiate with the man for the next two and a half hours while wielding riot shield. The man refused to lay down the firearm, claiming that the officers would "torture him to the bone" and "steal his personality", threatening to "shoot all policemen dead" before he stopped responding to their questions. Shortly after, he rushed the officers' position with the gun drawn, leading to him getting shot twice.[209][210] |
1986-02-12 | N.N. | 21 | Rosenheim | Bayern | Police followed and eventually went to arrest a suspicious man at the train station. Upon their approach, the man pulled out a knife and charged one officer, leading to the other fatally shooting the attacker.[209] |
1986-04-XX | N.N. | 29 | Hamburg | Hamburg | In Eimsbüttel, four police officers were called in to arrest a Turkish man for domestic abuse of his girlfriend. The drunk man heavily resisted as the officers tried to force him into a police car. Because 21-year-old officer Andreas Voigt believed the man might use the handcuff attached to his right wrist as a weapon, Voigt applied a jujutsu-based police "back transport grip" to quickly push the suspect inside. During a one-minute scuffle, the technique instead ended in a chokehold, causing the man's death by asphyxiation. The officer was charged with manslaughter and physical injury resulting in death.[201] |
1986-05-01 | Schneider, Charles | 38 | Singen | Baden-Württemberg | Following reports of a stabbing at a local dive bar, police arrived at the premises to find a man fleeing into the courtyard. The man then pulled out a knife and a handgun, firing at the officers until he was fatally shot.[209] |
1986-05-04 | H., Herbert | 19 | Pfungstadt | Hessen | A repeat offender did not return after prison furlough and stole a motorhome to evade the authorities. During the car chase, a squad car drove up to the driver's side of the motorhome and shot the offender. The public prosecutor's office charged the officer with assault causing death, but a court declined to bring the matter to trial.[209] |
1986-05-16 | Meck, Karl | 57 | München | Bayern | A neighbour called police over a possible break-in at a private residence. When police arrived and shone a light through a window, a shot was fired from within, with returning killing the owner of the house, who was found in possession of a gas pistol.[209] |
1986-07-07 | E., Horst | 22 | Wilhelmshaven | Niedersachsen | Police were called to respond to a rape taking place at a private residence. At the location, officers are attacked by a man wielding a sabre, who was swiftly shot and killed.[209] |
1986-09-01 | Obermayer, Hans | 55 | Rellingen | Schleswig-Holstein | Police rang the doorbell to a residence where a domestic incident between a married couple was reported. When the door was opened, the husband immediately opened fire on police, who shot him nine times in return.[209] |
1986-10-07 | Soucka, Markku | 27 | München | Bayern | A Finnish engineer had taken a 54-year-old man hostage with a knife in broad daylight on a busy street in Moosach, dragged him into a stranger's car. and threatened to kill the hostage. Police shot him when they assumed he was about to follow through on his threats. His motives remain unclear, though it was later discovered that he had a long psychiatric record and was apparently addicted to prescription medicine.[209] |
1986-10-31 | Bloy, Werner | 45 | München | Bayern | In the evening of 29 October, an unemployed heater installer took his ex-girlfriend, 23-year-old commercial clerk Petra Hofmeier, hostage with a Mauser C96 after he unsuccessfully attempted to "talk things out" about their relationship and abducted her to his apartment in Schwabing. The hostage situation lasted 39 hours with a peak of 200 police officers monitoring the flat. The kidnapper demanded 1 million DM and a getaway car with a private chaffeur. Police decided after much deliberation that they had to make use of a "fatal shot", the first of its kind to be used by Munich police, with even the Archiepiscopal Ordinariate reasoning that deadly force had to be used as the final resort. On 31 October, police placed a SEK sniper by the apartment used as a hand off spot and at midday, after the hostage fetched breakfast items requested by the kidnapper, including four cold cut and cheese rolls, two packs of Marlboro cigarettes and a Sunday copy of a local newspaper, the kidnapper became upset that a bottle of lemonade was being handed over later than expected, leading to him throwing open the curtains to see what was happening. He was immediately shot by the sniper from a distance of 40 meters.[188][209] |
1986-11-12 | D., Andreas | 25 | München | Bayern | A police officer doing volunteer work at a gas station foiled a robbery by two armed young men, shooting one of them three times. Their guns were found to be gas pistols.[209] |
1986-12-21 | N.N. | 30 | Altötting | Bayern | Two officers were called to investigate the site of a break-in where they found the burglar still present. Although unarmed, he violently resisted arrest, to the point both officers fired their weapons once, with one shot hitting and killing the burglar.[209] |
1987
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987-02-04 | M., Mustafa | 25 | München | Bayern | A plainclothed police officer caught a car thief in the act and fatally shot him two times when the thief attacked him with a knife.[211] |
1987-02-04 | N.N. | 44 | Kempen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Two men were seen by police attempting to break into a bar. One of the burglars fled and attempted to jump an officer who then used deadly force.[211] |
1987-06-08 | N.N. | 37 | Tuttlingen | Baden-Württemberg | Police were called to an apartment building after neighbours complained about loud music from an apartment. Five officers fixated the noise offender to the ground and bound him. The man aspyhxiated from restraints around his neck as the officers carried him down the staircase to the squad car.[212] |
1987-06-17 | N.N. | 27 | Nahe | Schleswig-Holstein | A student threw a duffel bag in front of the airport in Hamburg and drove away. Police were able to stop the student's vehicle in Nahe, where he was shot after again attempting escape.[211] |
1988
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1988-01-13 | N.N. | 23 | Frankfurt am Main | Hessen | Police patrolling a car park attempted to conduct a search on a suspicious car when the driver accelerated and hit an officer. As the car attempted to drive off, another officer fired at the vehicle, hitting and killing the driver, a known drug addict.[213] |
1988-02-06 | Wawroschek, Armin | 26 | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | While looking for a suspect who had robbed a gas station two hours earlier, two officers approached a man using a payphone for questioning. The man subsequently pulled out a gun and opened fire on one of the officers, who suffered a grazing injury and a shot in the abdomen. The other officer returned fire and killed the shooter. The loot of 4000 DM was found in his Nordstadt-Bonn home, where police also found several pistols, ammunition, a NVD, a detonator, and eco-terrorist writings in which he described "waging war" on the automotive industry and "car society" to "recreate an enjoyable landscape". Another note also took responsibility for a fire bombing on A98 on 14 January 1988, which was linked to another one in Bergheim. The offender had only been previously noted for participating in riots in Krefeld in relation to the 1984 visit of U.S. Vice President George H.W. Bush.[213][214] |
1988-03-04 | Stefanovic, Slobodan | 37 | Dorfen | Bayern | Polizeikommissar Robert Gebler, 27, und Polizeihauptmeister Karl-Heinz Loibl, 43, confiscated a cache of seven guns and 2000 rounds of ammunition from the home of machinist Slobodan Stefanovic, a Serb Yugoslavian national and 16 year resident of the town. His firearm license, which he had obtained after joining a rifle club in his main residency in Ludwigshafen in 1984, was revoked the previous day following a psychological assessment that was made after Stefanovic reasoned in a license renewal in an eleven-page letter to a courthouse in Erding from December 30, 1987, that he needed protection from the Red Army Faction, the KGB, and American boxer Muhammad Ali. Two and a half hours later, Stefanovic drove over to the nearby police station, entered the room Gebler and Loibl were categorizing the weapons in and screamed "Give me my guns back!" before grabbing a Colt Peacemaker and .44 Magnum revolver off the table and gunning down both officers. He shot at several more police officers, as well as a responding paramedic, wounding Polizeihauptmeister Franz Klarl and fatally injuring Polizeihauptkommissar Alfred Maier, 46, who died on the doorstep of a neighbour, telling him to call the Red Cross. Stefanovic is fatally shot himself after firing on a passing police cruiser.[213][215][216][217] |
1988-04-13 | N.N. | 32 | Nordhorn | Niedersachsen | A Turkish man killed two other Turks in an apparent family/love dispute in Emsdetten and fled with his girlfriend. Police were able to fatally shoot the man during a car chase, but not before he killed his girlfriend.[213] |
1988-05-04 | N.N. | 50 | Hamburg | Hamburg | A taxi driver called police after a passenger pointed a knife at him. Said passenger exited the taxi as soon as squad cars arrived and began threatening the officers instead. After several verbal warnings and a shot in the air, the passenger attacked an officer, who proceeded to shoot the attacker in the knee and arm. The officer then stumbled and inadvertently fired the fatal shot on the passenger.[213] |
1988-06-05 | N.N. | Schramberg | Baden-Württemberg | Neighbours alerted police to a break-in at a nearby bar. Upon entering the building, the two burglars attacked the officers and when one of them pulled out a gun, the officers shot and killed him.[213] | |
1988-08-18 | Bischoff, Silke | 18 | Bad Honnef | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Gladbeck hostage crisis: On 16 August, two men robbed a bank in Gladbeck and managed to escape with two hostages, also picking up one of the robbers' girlfriend as an accomplice. The next day, the trio hijacked a bus in Bremen, killing a 14-year-old passenger after the female accomplice was temporarily apprehended during a stop in Sottrum. On 18 August, the bus and most of its hostages were released in Oldenzaal, after which the kidnappers drove back into Germany in another getaway car with two hostages. SEK eventually rammed the vehicle and during the shootout, one of the bus hostages was injured by a shot in the back by police while the other was killed by a shot in the heart. It has been heavily debated whether the fatal shot was fired by one of the perpetrators or police, although the entire operation was heavily criticized for both the unrestrained media presence interacting with the robbers, as well as police's incompetence to prioritize the hostage safety.[213][218][219] |
1988-11-25 | N.N. | 29 | Lichtenfels | Bayern | Police responded to a potential break-in following a night alarm going off at a supermarket. During the sweep of the aisles, the burglar shot and critically injured one officers before he was gunned down by another.[213] |
1988-12-23 | N.N. | 25 | Wiesbaden | Hessen | Two police officers attempted to perform an arrest on a man who did not return from his prison furlough. The man beat one of the officers down and while scuffling with the other, the second officer's gun accidentally discharged and killed the man.[213][220] |
1989
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989-02-22 | N.N. | 43 | Köln | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A physician described as a "gun hoarder" called police to respond to an emergency. Once the arriving officers stepped out of their car, the physician opened fire on them, who shot back and killed him.[221] |
1989-03-25 | N.N. | 31 | Speyer | Rheinland-Pfalz | A hotel owner called police due to a Turkish guest rampaging through the building. Police engage the guest physically and fatally shot him when he threw a knife at the officers.[221] |
1989-5-25 | N.N. | 28 | Straubing | Bayern | During an armed robbery at a casino hall, the robber took a male employee hostage. Police opened fire when the robber pointed his gun at the officers.[221] |
1989-06-30 | Cipiloglu, Kemal | 13 | Essen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | Two Turkish teenagers caused a traffic accident when they crashed the moped they were driving into a car. Although the damage was minor and they offered to pay for the repair on the spot, the younger of the pair fled on the moped when the motorist and his wife went to call police, likely because he had borrowed the uninsured bike from a neighbor. Upon being stopped, he took a police officer's gun while wrestling with him on the ground. He continued his flight and shot at the police several times. He was eventually surrounded in an area of allotments and was shot five times while standing on the roof of a hut. He fell to the ground and bled to death. The incident caused political repercussions due to the age of the shooter and the operational tactics of the police officers.[222] |
1989-07-28 | Schumaier, Johann | 36 | Ulm | Baden-Württemberg | Police recognized a man as a convict who had escaped custody in April. Officers fatally shot the convict as he attempted to flee.[221] |
1989-08-08 | Beyida-Otomo, Frédéric | 48 | Stuttgart | Baden-Württemberg | Gaisburg Bridge police stabbing [de]: A refugee was found to be riding a tram without paying and brutally beat down an objecting ticket controller, knocking out several of his teeth, before fleeing. When found by the alerted authorities two hours later standing with his back turned by Gaisburg Bridge, they were ambushed by the refugee, who killed two police officers (Peter Quast, 28, and Harald Poppe, 27) and wounded three others with a bayonet he had hidden in a newspaper in an attack lasting around 15 seconds. He was killed with three shots by a wounded officer, Jürgen Hähnlein, as he attempted to flee the scene. It was discovered after the perpetrator's death that he had been living under a fake identity, having falsely claimed to be a 46-year-old Liberian named Albert Ament, when he was really a 48 year old Cameroonian named Frédéric Beyida-Otomo from Mbassila Village, Sa'a, who had spent the last 21 years living in several countries, including France, Spain, the United States, and Luxembourg. Otomo was suspected to be mentally disturbed as he had written a letter to Hans-Dietrich Genscher in broken German, demanding compensation for a three-month stint in a deportation facility or else Genscher would be killed. A search of Otomo's apartment revealed that he celebrated his 48th birthday only two days before the murders. The 1999 film Otomo depicts a dramatized recreation of the incident.[223] |
1989-08-27 | N.N. | 38 | Gersheim | Bayern | A police officer shot and killed the boyfriend of his ex-wife before killing himself; the pair were still living together.[221] |
1989-09-09 | Dittl, Peter | 17 | Würzburg | Bayern | Two plainclothed police officers approached a parked car out of suspicion that the two teenage occupants were planning a robbery. A 37-year-old officer accidentally discharged his sidearm, which he had pulled out of "safety concerns", killing the passenger of the car with a headshot. The officer later said that he unintentionally pulled the trigger due to spotting a knife in the backseat and seeing the passenger panickedly gesturing with his hands. An investigation was halted, but the officer was sentenced to pay a 9000 DM fine.[224][221][225] |
1989-11-19 | Em, Dietmar | 30 | Offenbach | Hessen | Laaber murders : On 13 November, two Austrian convicts escaped from prison in Steyr, stole two pistols, ammunition and a car in Linz and crossed the border into Bavaria with plans to rob a bank in Frankfurt am Main in order to go into hiding overseas. The pair stopped in Laaber to commit a robbery for gas money, settling on a pub with only five regulars and a single waitress inside, and took the place at gunpoint after ordering cola. When one of the regulars asked them to reconsider, the convicts opened fire, killing four (aged 34 to 48) and heavily injuring two before fleeing in their car. The son of the owner reported the shooting shortly after, leading to a 24-hour manhunt for the suspects. In Neumarkt, the convicts picked up two teenage boys hitchhiking and left them with the car in a parking garage as a lure for police to find while they burgled a house. On their return, they carjacked two mothers with children at gunpoint, taking one of the women, the 26-year-old wife of a policeman, and continued their drive, stopping in Erlangen where they raped the hostage. Police identified the vehicle in Würzburg and had a squad car follow it while creating artificial traffic jams on B43, allowing SEK to narrow down the convicts' car and snipe one of them from afar in what was deemed usage of a "final shot". The hostage was rescued with light injuries and the other convict, 25-year-old Helmut Bergmayer, was sentenced to life imprisonment in Straubing prison, where he killed himself in 2020.[221][226][227][228] |
1989-11-23 | N.N. | 22 | Nürnberg | Bayern | Four burglars are caught by plainclothed police in their getaway car. After an officer approached them with his gun drawn, one of the burglars grabbed the weapon, leading to the officer firing and killing the burglar.[221] |
1989-12-26 | N.N. | 39 | Mannheim | Baden-Württemberg | A man called for help following a fight at a bar. Police found several men armed with shotguns outside the caller's house and proceeded to arrest them. One of the men began shooting wildly, leading to him being shot by an officer.[221] |
1990s
[edit]1990
Date (YYYY-MM-TT) |
Name | Age | Place | State | Summary of events |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1990-01-10 | W., Theo | 36 | Essen | Nordrhein-Westfalen | A pimp took a lawyer hostage in his office in Katernberg with a gas pistol to force a meeting with his wife, who was divorcing the pimp. After letting the lawyer's two secretaries leave, he threatened to shoot the lawyer and himself if his demands were not met. The pimp was shot in the chest by SEK when they stormed the premises.[229][230] |
1990-03-18 | Dapperger, Oliver | 29 | München | Bayern | After escaping from Stadelheim Prison, a drug dealer was to be arrested at his hiding place in a hotel in Solln following a tip-off. Police found him in the courtyard and fatally shot him when he produced a gun and took aim at the officers.[229] |
1990-06-25 | Suworow, Sergej N. | 19 | Burg bei Magdeburg | Bezirk Magdeburg | A deserting Soviet soldier took a married couple and their two children hostage in an attempt to force his return to Russia. He was killed after exchanging fire with Diensteinheit IX. Following German reunification, authorities applied the principle of a "fatal shot" to the pollice's actions.[231] |
1990-07-06 | B., Cem | 19 | München | Bayern | Following an altercation with a businessman, four Turkish teenagers were attempting to run away from police officers. When one of the officers believed one of the youths was going to attack, he fatally shot the teenager in question.[231] |
1990-08-06 | N.N. | 25 | Stuttgart | Baden-Württemberg | During a security check on a person, a random, uninvolved Yugoslavian man abruptly fired five shots at police, who shot back and killed him.[231] |
1990-09-06 | N.N. | Karl-Marx-Stadt | Bezirk Karl-Marx-Stadt | Two men attempted to rob a branch of Deutsche Bank. They were engaged in a shootout by police, during which one of the robbers was killed.[231] |
Post-reunification
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Zahlen ab 1996 nach: Clemens Lorei: Statistiken im Zusammenhang mit dem polizeilichen Schusswaffeneinsatz Archived 17 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Verwaltungsfachhochschule Hessen – Fachbereich Polizei, Stand: 17. August 2014
- ^ Zahlen von 1963 - 1969, nur BRD nach: Heiner Busch (Mitverfasser) et.al.: Die Polizei in der Bundesrepublik, Ausgabe von 1988
- ^ Zahlen von 1976 - 1983 nach: Heiner Busch (Mitverfasser) et.al.: Die Polizei in der Bundesrepublik, Ausgabe von 1988
- ^ "Die Schmach des Polizeisozialismus" (PDF). Schlesische Arbeiterzeitung. 13 September 1930. p. 8.
- ^ "Mordregister des Faschismus". Rote Hilfe Deutschland. March 1931.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Schießt die Polizei zu oft?". NDR. 23 August 1971.
- ^ a b "Die Schmach des Polizeisozialismus" (PDF). Schlesische Arbeiterzeitung. 13 September 1930. p. 8.
- ^ Vogel, Joel (29 April 2009). "Roter Wedding – rot wie Blut". Die Tageszeitung: taz (in German). p. 24. ISSN 0931-9085. Archived from the original on 9 May 2024. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
- ^ Kirchner, Stefan (29 April 1989). "Vor 60 Jahren: Barrikaden im Wedding". Die Tageszeitung: taz (in German). p. 31. ISSN 0931-9085. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
- ^ Klußmann, Uwe (24 September 2012). "»Blutmai« im Wedding". Der Spiegel (in German). ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
- ^ "Unruhen in Berlin 1929: Blutige Tage im Mai". Der Tagesspiegel Online (in German). ISSN 1865-2263. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
- ^ Brettin, Michael (15 November 2017). "Stadtgeschichte: Der Blutmai 1929". Berliner Zeitung (in German). Archived from the original on 9 May 2024. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
- ^ "Die Mehrzahl der Opfer unschuldige Passanten" (PDF). Danziger Volksstimme. 3 May 1929. p. 2.
- ^ Hermes, Ralf (13 July 2020). "Zeitdokument: 4. Mai 1929 – Berlin am Morgen". Republikpolizei.
- ^ Seidel, Falk (1 November 2022). Mit revolutionären Grüßen (in German). VSA. ISBN 978-3-96488-108-3.
- ^ Gerhardt, Dirk; Brack, Robert (14 November 2012). "Blutsonntag" (in German). Archived from the original on 29 July 2024.
- ^ "Altonaer Blutsonntag 1932: Massaker unter Zivilisten". Der Spiegel (in German). 13 July 2012. ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 31 July 2024.
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- ^ "Der Beginn der SS-Herrschaft" (PDF). Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte (digital copy of info plaque).
- ^ Busse, Ulf-Peter (13 August 2023). "Hitler-Begeisterung überall: Bergedorfs Weg ins Dritte Reich". www.abendblatt.de (in German). Archived from the original on 31 July 2024. Retrieved 31 July 2024.
- ^ "Ordnung und Vernichtung – Die Polizei im NS-Staat" (PDF). DEUTSCHES HISTORISCHES MUSEUM. 2011.
- ^ Stenglein, Frank (22 April 2015). "Letzte Ehre für die Toten vom Montagsloch". WAZ (in German).
- ^ "Enkelin von der Gestapo erschossen". www.op-online.de (in German). 24 March 2021.
- ^ Harborth, Christian (1 May 2020). "Hildesheimer NS-Morde am Montag Thema in Fernseh-Reportage". www.hildesheimer-allgemeine.de.
- ^ "Erinnerung an Schicksal von Zwangsarbeitern". Stadt Hildesheim (in German). 29 March 2017.
- ^ von Schroepfer, Robert (24 March 2024). "Mit dem VVN Chemnitz: Gemeinsames Gedenken an Hutholzopfer – Kaßberg-Gefängnis". Lern- und Gedenkort Kaßberg-Gefängnis (in German).
- ^ "„Stolperschwelle" erinnert an Gestapo-Morde 1945 in Kassel". HNA (in German). 29 June 2021.
- ^ "Hinrichtungen am Ostersamstag: Erinnerungen an das Kriegsende in Kassel". HNA (in German). 31 March 2020.
- ^ Büchel, Helmar (12 March 1983). "An die Gestapomorde von Wilhelmshöhe gibt es in Kassel kein sichtbares Erinnern: Das Blutbad ist ein Tabu geblieben" (PDF). Gedenkstätten Rundbrief. p. 17.
- ^ "GERMANS RELEASED FROM PRISON". Cairns Post. 24 September 1952.
- ^ "Vor dem Untergang: Verbrechen der letzten Kriegsphase 1945" (PDF). Mahn- und Gedenkstätte Steinwache. 25 March 2016.
- ^ "Mahnmal in der Wenzelnbergschlucht in Langenfeld". KuLaDig.
- ^ "Die Morde in der Wenzelnbergschlucht am 13. April 1945". Waterboelles. 13 April 2018.
- ^ Gammelin, Peter (17 November 2017). "Erinnerung in Wittorf an die Todesmärsche im April 1945 (Teil I)". Freies Radio Neumünster (in German).
- ^ "Die Hamburger Staatspolizei 1933" (PDF). Offenes Archiv.
- ^ "1946 von deutschen Polizisten erschossen". Jüdisches Museum Berlin (in German). Archived from the original on 14 May 2024. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
- ^ "Der Tod eines polnischen Juden 1946 in Stuttgart: Ein Täter, nach dem nie gesucht wurde". stuttgarter-zeitung.de (in German). 11 January 2022. Archived from the original on 14 May 2024. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
- ^ Stenzel, Oliver (13 October 2021). "Stuttgarter NS-Täter: "Hinterfragen lohnt"". KONTEXT:Wochenzeitung (in German). Retrieved 14 May 2024.
- ^ "One Jew Killed, Five Wounded in Clash Between German Police and Displaced Jews". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 31 March 1946. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ "Gedenktafel für Samuel Danziger und "Displaced Persons"". Landeshauptstadt Stuttgart (in German). Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ Bartle, Jürgen (6 April 2016). "Mensch am falschen Platz". KONTEXT:Wochenzeitung (in German). Archived from the original on 21 April 2024. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
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