Werner Mauss Explained

Werner Mauss (born 11 February 1940) is a German former private investigator and civilian employee for police authorities and intelligence services. The name Mauss became known to the general public in association with several political conflicts and alleged scandals. The scandals included alleged conspiracy with terrorist organizations such as the ELN.

Activities

His activities as an informant earned him contacts to police authorities including the Federal Criminal Police Office (German: Bundeskriminalamt, BKA), to intelligence services (German: [[Bundesnachrichtendienst]], BND) and to politics. In the 1990s his contacts extended into the German Chancellery. There the direct report for Mauss was the coordinator for the intelligence services of the Kohl government, then Minister of State Bernd Schmidbauer.

Beginnings of his career

At the age of twenty Mauss founded a detective agency in Essen. Besides his job as a plain private detective he received private training by police instructors as a lone fighter and investigator as well as education in criminalistics, criminal law, strategy and conspiracy. Soon Mauss no longer worked for private clients such as insurance companies; he rather started to work exclusively for security authorities, namely undercover inside the criminal milieu. In 1969 Mauss for the first time worked by order and on account of the newly established investigation unit of the Federal Criminal agency BKA. With the collaboration of Mauss the most wanted fugitives, alleged police murderer Alfred Lecki and robber Werner Derks could be traced in Alicante and Marbella and eventually arrested by the police.[1]

Activities in South America

In the mid-1980s, Mauss operated increasingly in South America, especially Colombia. There he was deployedinitially on behalf of the Mannesmann AGin order to enforce the construction of a pipeline under resistance of the National Liberation Army guerrilla group (ELN) and to rescue four kidnapped managers of the company.

Mauss allegedly negotiated the release of several European hostages from the ELN.[2] The exact circumstances and his role in the entire operation was put into question by various observers.[3]

In 1997, Mauss was arrested while trying to flee Colombia with a recently freed Brigitte Schoene. Mauss was charged with false documents (carrying fake passports for both himself and Schoene), conspiracy to kidnap, and aggravated extortionary kidnapping. Ulrich Schoene, the husband of Brigitte Schoene, pressed charges against Mauss and his actions during the liberation of Brigitte Schoene.[4] Mauss was accused of conspiring with the ELN. Furthermore, Brigitte Schoene allegedly saw Mauss's car on the night of 14 August 1996, the night the kidnapping took place.

Mauss and his wife were cleared on all accounts (known as Preclusión in Colombian Law). The Colombian court, under diplomatic pressure from the German government, had declared the arrest illegal.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.werner-mauss.de Documentary by Stephan Lamby by order of the MDR: Der Top Agent „Das geheime Leben des Werner Mauss“, broadcast by ARD on 17 February 1999, NDR on 4 September 2000 and by Phoenix on 12 February 2002
  2. http://www.werner-mauss.de/anerk_schreiben.html Letter from President Ernesto Samper, Bogotá, 29 November 2005, Colombia
  3. Web site: Response by the German Federal government to the "Inquiry" with regard to the role of the German Federal government in connection with the operations of Mauss in Colombia . .
  4. News: Cloak-and-Dagger Tale in Bogota Has German Accent. Diana Jean. Schemo. 1 January 1997. The New York Times.