A 54-year-old man is facing trial for sending dozens of death threats to prominent politicians and lawyers. But some believe the investigation should be much wider — and should examine police circles.
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Alleged far-right extremist Alexander Horst M.* went on trial in Frankfurt on Wednesday accused of sending dozens of threatening emails and messages to public figures under the name "NSU 2.0," apparently in an attempt to assume the legacy of the neo-Nazi terrorist organization known as the National Socialist Underground (NSU).
The original NSU carried out several nail-bomb attacks and murdered at least 10 people between 2000 and 2007 before being uncovered in 2011. Its only known surviving member, Beate Zschäpe, was sentenced to life in prison in 2018, after one of the longest and most complex neo-Nazi trials in German history.
Chronicle of the NSU murders
The crimes of the neo-Nazi terror cell and the way state authorities dealt with them, still reverberate today. DW gives you the background to an affair that has shaken Germany.
Image: picture alliance / dpa
A mysterious string of murders
For years, neo-Nazis of the right-wing organization National Socialist Underground (NSU) killed people across Germany. The suspects: Uwe Mundlos, Uwe Böhnhardt (center) and Beate Zschäpe. Their victims: eight people of Turkish origin, one Greek man and a German policewoman. Their motive: xenophobia. Until 2011, the German public was not aware of the scope of their crimes.
Image: privat/dapd
Unsuccessful bank robbery
The murder spree was uncovered on November 4, 2011, when Mundlos and Böhnhardt robbed a bank in the east German town of Eisenach. For the first time, they failed. Police officers surrounded the caravan in which the two men were holed up. A later investigation concluded that Mundlos first shot and killed Böhnhardt, then set the caravan on fire and killed himself.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Zschäpe turns herself in
Shortly after the death of Böhnhardt and Mundlos there was an explosion at Frühlingsstraße 26 in Zwickau, in the state of Saxony. Beate Zschäpe lived at that address together with the two bank robbers. Zschäpe allegedly set the house on fire to destroy evidence. Four days later, she turned herself in to the police. The terror suspect has been custody since that day.
Image: Getty Images
The truth comes out
In the ruins of the Zwickau flat, police officers found a self-made video in which the terror cell claimed responsibility under the name of the NSU, the National-Socialist Underground. The 15-minute video shows crime scenes and pictures of the victims killed by the right-wing terrorist group between 2000 and 2007.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
NSU claim responsibility
Famous cartoon character The Pink Panther hosts the amateur video, which is full of slogans of hatred against people with an immigrant background and which mocks the murder victims. Before her arrest, Zschäpe allegedly sent out copies of the video in which the NSU claimed responsibility for the crimes.
Image: dapd
Verbal slip-ups
Until 2011, the term "döner murders" was frequently used when reporting about the killings. Nothing was known about the connection between the individual cases, nor about the motive. There were rumors the victims were linked to the drug scene. But the NSU's video left no doubt. The term "döner murders" was chosen as Germany's "Unwort des Jahres" (doublespeak of the year) in 2011.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
NSU also behind Cologne pipe bomb
"The findings made by our security authorities so far show no indication of a terrorist background, but of a criminal milieu," said German Interior Minister Otto Schily on June 10, 2004. A day earlier, a pipe bomb explosion in Cologne left 22 people injured and many shops damaged. In 2011, it became clear: the NSU’s right-wing terrorists were also behind the Cologne bombing.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
Memorial service in Berlin
On February 23, 2012, Germany commemorated the victims. At the ceremony at a Berlin concert hall, the focus was on the relatives of the victims. Semiya Simsek (right), the daughter of the murdered flower stand owner Enver Simsek, gave an emotional speech. German Chancellor Angela Merkel made an official apology to the victims and promised them that all questions would be answered.
Image: Bundesregierung/Kugler
Memorial for Mehmet Kubasik
"Dortmund is a colorful, tolerant and welcoming town – and opposes right-wing extremism!" This statement was made by mayor Ullrich Sierau at the unveiling of the memorial stone for NSU victim Mehmet Kubasik in September 2012. The memorial was set up just meters away from the kiosk in which Kubasik was killed on April 4, 2006.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Solidarity with the victims
On November 4, 2012, exactly a year after the terror cell was uncovered, people in many German cities staged solidarity demonstrations against right-wing extremism. The protesters called for thorough investigations into the racially motivated murders - which in their view was not happening fast enough.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Beate Zschäpe lone survivor
Believed to be the last survivor of the NSU trio, Beate Zschäpe went on trial in May 2013.Over 800 witnesses were heard. Zschäpe did not speak for the first two and a half years of the trial.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Schrader
Life sentence
Beate Zschäpe was given a life sentence. She was found guilty of joint complicity in 10 counts of murder, arson, robbery, extortion, the formation of a terrorist organization and membership in a terrorist organization. Though there was no evidence that she herself was present at the scene of the crimes, the judges felt that the "particular severity of guilt" required for a life sentence applied.
Image: Getty Images/A. Gebert
The co-accused
Ralf Wohlleben received 10 years for procuring weapons for the NSU, co-accused Holger G. got three years for providing false identity papers. Another co-accused, Andre E, received two and a half years for providing the NSU with rail passes in his and his wife's name. He also allegedly rented a mobile home which the cell drove to Cologne to carry out a bombing.
Image: AFP/Getty Images/C. Stache
Long lasting impact
When conservative politician Walter Lübcke was murdered by a neo-Nazi activist in 2019, his name was also found on the 'list of enemies' for targetted killings. Lübcke had come under attack from the far-right following a speech he made in 2015 defending the decision to take in refugees from the Syrian war.
Image: Swen Pförtner/dpa/picture alliance
Securty agency failings
The federal and the state parliaments launched investigations to shed light on the security authorities' failures in the NSU case: The role of paid informants, the lack of cooperation between the various intelligence agencies and state interior ministries, which are responsible for police in the respective states, and allegations of systemic racism on the part of German authorities.
In Frankfurt on Wednesday morning, Alexander Horst M. held up his handcuffed hands, both middle fingers raised to the cameras and the courtroom, as he waited for his trial to begin. He confirmed his name but refused to give his address, a routine formality in a German trial, on the grounds that "it's none of the press's business."
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The 54-year-old defendant then sat still for the next three hours, often with his arms folded, once briefly admonished by the judge for letting his FFP-2 mask slip below his nose, while the prosecution read out every one of the threatening emails and messages he had allegedly sent between August 2018 and March 2021.
The texts, addressed to prominent politicians, lawyers, journalists, and entertainers, frequently contained a litany of "death sentences," racist insults, and general hate speech.
There were references to racist conspiracy theories about the supposed "genocide" and "replacement" of the German population, and predictions of a "Day X" — a term often used by the German far-right to refer to a "day of reckoning" when violent conflict will supposedly break out in the country. The letters were often signed "Heil Hitler," and the sender referred to himself repeatedly either as an SS officer or the "leader of the NSU 2.0."
Though several of the recipients of these messages will testify as witnesses during the trial, none were present on Wednesday morning. The Left Party politicians among them, were represented by Hesse state parliament member Hermann Schaus, who has led the socialist party's inquiries into far-right networks in the state.
"The number of threats is increasing, unfortunately, but most of them are just incoherent letters," said Schaus. "But this is a different case. These were written by someone who knows his way around the bureaucracy, who can do concrete research, who can express himself well, and who can spread a very different quality of fear and terror than I am used to as a politician. I saw what an effect it had on some of the recipients."
Was the accused helped by police officers?
For Schaus, and many of the victims, the biggest question of this trial revolves around the suspicion that police officers passed on private details. The letter campaign coincided with the discovery of a far-right chat group among members of the Hesse police's special commando unit (SEK). Several officers were suspended, and the unit was dissolved in 2021. "We shouldn't forget that in Hesse alone another 70 investigations in the police were opened as a result of the suspensions in the chat group," said Schaus.
The letters presented as evidence contain apparent references to this police unit — two years before the scandal surfaced. "Those connections remain unexplained," Schaus told DW, before accusing the state prosecutors of failing to follow up on those suspicions.
Hesse prosecutors have insisted that, despite thorough investigations, no evidence against police officers has been found. According to prosecutors, the suspect was able to impersonate officials on the phone to trick the police into giving out the personal information.
How racist is Germany's police?
03:27
NSU 2.0 complex
One of the key witnesses in the trial is likely to be Frankfurt lawyer Seda Basay-Yildiz, who represented several victims of the original NSU during Zschäpe's trial, and subsequently received several death threats from the "NSU 2.0" containing information about her family and a supposedly secret address that was not publicly available.
In an interview last June, Basay-Yildiz recounted that, while she had received many threats throughout her career, she had decided to press charges in this case because "a personal boundary had been crossed."
"The fax contained my daughter's name and my private address," she told local public broadcaster Hessenschau. "I asked straight away: How could the sender have this information about me? On that day I was on business abroad. I came into the hotel and this fax was waiting for me. I was shocked. My child was being threatened and I was thousands of kilometers away from her."
In a joint statement posted on Twitter on Monday, Basay-Yildiz, Left party politicians Janine Wissler, Anne Helm, and Martina Renner, and cabaret entertainer Idil Baydar and writer Hengameh Yaghoobifarah declared:
"For us, it's a scandal that the investigation is being carried out against a supposed single perpetrator."
The defendant is to read a prepared statement in response to the allegations on the second day of the trial on Thursday. He is also facing charges for assaulting a police officer and possessing child pornography discovered at his home during police searches.
The court has set 14 trial dates so far, stretching until the end of April, though more dates are expected to be added.
Edited by: Rina Goldenberg
*Editor's note: DW follows the German press code, which stresses the importance of protecting the privacy of suspected criminals or victims and urges us to refrain from revealing full names in such cases.
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