German 'far-right' gunman jailed for life in Nuremberg
- Published
A court in Bavaria has jailed a man with far-right links to life imprisonment for killing a policeman during a raid on his home last year.
The man, named only as Wolfgang P, was described as a "Reichsb眉rger" - part of a group that rejects the German state.
The Nuremberg court found him guilty of murder for the shooting last October.
Three other special forces policemen were wounded when the man fired at them through a door. They had gone to seize his guns in a town near Nuremberg.
It is a German legal convention not to give a defendant's family name for privacy reasons.
Wolfgang P had an arsenal of about 30 guns, which police went to seize early in the morning in Georgensgm眉nd.
The Reichsb眉rger ("Reich Citizens") group does not recognise the authority of the post-war German federal republic. It believes in the continued existence of a German empire, or Reich, dating back to 1937 or even earlier.
German internal security officials estimate the group's membership to be 12,600 nationally, with at least 3,000 of them in Bavaria.
The shooting prompted the authorities to reassess the group's influence in Germany, and to recognise that there were potentially dangerous neo-Nazis among them.
Reichsb眉rger had mostly come to the authorities' attention for refusing to pay taxes and for possession of firearms. Wolfgang P's letterbox bore the inscription "Government territory of Wolfgang" and the message "Here my word is law!", S眉ddeutsche Zeitung reported.
- Published29 August 2017
- Published20 October 2016