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40/68 – “We Are Not Going to Defend Ourselves Before Such a Justice System!” – 1968 and the Courts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

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On November 29, 1967, Commune I member Fritz Teufel had to face his second day in a West Berlin courtroom. Teufel was charged with breaching the public peace for allegedly hurling stones at policemen during a demonstration against the visit of the Shah of Persia on June 2, 1967– the same event during which West German police officer Karl-Heinz Kurras killed twenty-six-year-old student Benno Ohnesorg with a shot to the head. When the judge entered the courtroom that day in late November, Teufel sat in the same spot in which only one week before Kurras had been acquitted of involuntary manslaughter for his actions on June 2. As everybody stood up, Teufel alone remained in his seat, leisurely browsing through the day's newspaper. Only after the judge repeatedly urged him to stand up, stop his defiant behavior, and pay his respects to the court did Teufel slowly rise to his feet and utter a seemingly spontaneous and sardonic remark, which became a rallying cry for the mocking and disrespectful attitude of the student movement against West German authorities: “Well, if it's gonna help establish the truth…” (Naja, wenn's der Wahrheitsfindung dient).

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Copyright © 2009 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

1 I would like to thank Alexander Holmig, Casey Sutcliffe, Philipp Gassert and Maria Höhn for their comments on the ideas and arguments expressed in this article as well as many helpful suggestions.Google Scholar

2 Teufel was not released until August 10, more than two months later, on the condition that he check in at the local police station twice a week. He refused to do so, and, a week later, even appeared in front of the courthouse in a penitent's gown demanding to be readmitted to pre-trial confinement while locked up in a rolling cart secured with chains. When the police denied his request, Teufel violated his court order and was arrested again during a sit-in at West Berlin City Hall in mid-September.Google Scholar

3 On the trial against Kurras from the perspective of Otto Schily, the lawyer for the brother and father of Benno Ohnesorg in 1967, see Stefan Reinicke, Otto Schily: Vom RAF-Anwalt zum Innenminister, 82–86 (2003).Google Scholar

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26 Quoted after Uwe Nettelbeck, Die Frankfurter Brandstifter, Die Zeit, November 8, 1968.Google Scholar

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30 See Michels, Reinhold, Otto Schily: Eine Biographie (2001); Reinicke, supra, note 3, passim. Other equally revealing political biographies of legal actors are those by Christian Ströbele (Green Party) or Horst Mahler (who has now adopted right-wing extremist and anti-Semitic positions). For the latter, see Martin Jandel, Horst Mahler, in Die RAF und der linke Terrorismus, 372–397 (Kraushaar, Wolfgang, ed., 2006).Google Scholar

31 In terms of the interaction between activists, the courts and public opinion the case of Beate Klarsfeld is particularly interesting. On November 7, 1968, Beate Klarsfeld, who had initiated a comprehensive public campaign against the National Socialist past of Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger, interrupted his speech at the CDU party convention in Berlin. Walking up to Kiesinger and denouncing him as a “Nazi,” Klarsfeld slapped him in the face before she was dragged away. In a matter of two hours, a Berlin court found her guilty of assault and sentenced her to a year in prison. This fast and draconic ruling provoked a public outcry from observers of different political backgrounds, especially since Klarsfeld's defense lawyer Horst Mahler had only been able to speak to her for half an hour before the sentencing without any time to prepare the case. For an examination of the event and the subsequent trial see Philipp Gassert, Kurt Georg Kiesinger, 1904–1988: Kanzler zwischen den Zeiten, 651–659 (2006).Google Scholar