Germany: Convictions of neo-Nazi terror cell upheld on appeal
Germany's Federal Court of Justice dismissed the appeal
Thursday of notorious National Socialist Underground (NSU) member Beate
Zschäpe, and two others connected to the neo-Nazi terror cell.
Zschäpe lived with her friends Uwe Mundlos and Uwe Bönhardt
for nearly 14 years. Between 2000 and 2007, they killed seven men of Turkish
and one man of Greek origin, and a policewoman.
In 2011, Mundlos and Böhnhardt took their own lives to
escape imminent arrest following a botched robbery. Zschäpe set fire to a flat
they all shared, recording a confession video before turning herself in.
Zschäpe had handled the terror cell's logistics and finances
and set up safe houses for them.
While the court did overturn one of Zschäpe's sentences, her
conviction was upheld. The court
announced that "the overall life sentence and the particular severity of
guilt established have remained unaffected by this."
In a written order, the court determined the sentences
against two supporters of the cell, Ralf Wohlleben and Holger G., were also
legally binding.
Domestic terror trial lasting years
The trial over the neo-Nazi terror cell's murders and
attacks came to an end in July 2018 after more than five years and 400 trial
days. The April 2020 verdict is more than 4,000 pages long.
Zschäpe was sentenced to life imprisonment as an accomplice
in the murders. Though there was no evidence that she herself was present at
the scene of the group's crimes, the judges felt that the "particular
severity of guilt" required for a life sentence in German law had been
demonstrated.
Wohlleben had received 10 years for procuring weapons for
the cell and Holger G. three years for providing false identity papers to
Zschäpe and the two men she shared an underground life of terror with.
Another co-accused, Andre E, received two and a half years
for providing the National Socialist Underground with rail passes in his and
his wife's name that bore images of Böhnhardt and Zschäpe instead. He also
allegedly rented a mobile home which the cell drove to Cologne to carry out a
bombing.
The verdict in his appeal is expected before the end of the
year. Prosecutors in his case believe his sentence was too lenient.
Anti-racism activists in Germany have been critical of the
German authorities' handling of the investigations into the murders carried out
by the group. The terror cell went undetected for years and was only discovered
by chance following a botched bank robbery.
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