The RAF-Files
Their actions and motives. The perpetrators and their victims
The Baader-Meinhof gang – a myth dispelled: published for the first time ever, the key documents on Germany’s terrorists bring the truth to light.
They refuse to acknowledge their guilt and show no remorse. Nevertheless several members of the Baader-Meinhof gang, the Red Army Faction ‘RAF’ are being released from prison. The sentences handed down by the courts against Andreas Baader, Ulrike Meinhof, Gudrun Ensslin, Jan-Carl Raspe and their followers give us an insight into the brutal reality that lay behind the actions and motives of the RAF. Ulf G. Stuberger was granted access to approximately 1000 court sentences that had previously been kept under wraps. With the first-ever publication of these unique contemporary records he hopes to dispel some of the mystique that surrounds the perpetrators and prompt them to break their Mafia-like silence.
Ulf G. Stuberger, born in 1949 in Oberhausen, in the Ruhr area, worked as a writer and court reporter for the Supreme Court at Karlsruhe and the federal public prosecutor. He was the only journalist to have followed the first trial of the RAF ringleaders in court and, in consequence, was caught in the crossfire. Read more on www.stuberger.de.
The Baader-Meinhof gang – a myth dispelled: published for the first time ever, the key documents on Germany’s terrorists bring the truth to light.
They refuse to acknowledge their guilt and show no remorse. Nevertheless several members of the Baader-Meinhof gang, the Red Army Faction ‘RAF’ are being released from prison. The sentences handed down by the courts against Andreas Baader, Ulrike Meinhof, Gudrun Ensslin, Jan-Carl Raspe and their followers give us an insight into the brutal reality that lay behind the actions and motives of the RAF. Ulf G. Stuberger was granted access to approximately 1000 court sentences that had previously been kept under wraps. With the first-ever publication of these unique contemporary records he hopes to dispel some of the mystique that surrounds the perpetrators and prompt them to break their Mafia-like silence.
Ulf G. Stuberger, born in 1949 in Oberhausen, in the Ruhr area, worked as a writer and court reporter for the Supreme Court at Karlsruhe and the federal public prosecutor. He was the only journalist to have followed the first trial of the RAF ringleaders in court and, in consequence, was caught in the crossfire. Read more on www.stuberger.de.
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