Michael Newrzella Explained

Michael Newrzella
Birth Date:September 15, 1967
Birth Place:Aachen, West Germany
Death Place:Bad Kleinen, Germany
Department:Grenzschutzgruppe 9
Serviceyears:1991–1993

Michael Newrzella (September 15, 1967 – June 27, 1993) was a German police officer and member of GSG 9, the counter-terrorism and special operations unit of the German Federal Police, who was killed by the Red Army Faction.

Newrzella participated in a joint operation by the Federal Criminal Police Office and the Federal Border Police to arrest Red Army Faction members Wolfgang Grams and Birgit Hogefeld at the train station in Bad Kleinen. Grams managed to shoot at the two officers attempting to arrest him, missing the other officer but hitting Newrzella, severely wounding him and he died a few hours later.

Reportedly, after Newrzella had been shot, Grams then attempted to commit suicide by shooting himself, surviving but dying later that day in hospital. Shortly after the Bad Kleinen operation, there were allegations that Grams had not shot himself but was executed by a police officer that shot him in the head from close distance. The Staatsanwaltschaft Schwerin investigated these allegations and concluded in January 1994 that they were incorrect. Grams' parents challenged this conclusion in court, but it was upheld by five different courts, including the European Court of Human Rights in 1999.[1]

References

  1. Book: Peters, Butz . Tödlicher Irrtum . Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag . Frankfurt am Main . 2007 . German . 694–701 . 978-3-596-17265-8 .

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