Death on Track 4
By James O Jackson Bonn
At first it looked like nothing more than a violent spasm
in the 23-year-long war between Germany's Red Army Faction terrorists and the
government. On June 27, operatives belonging to GSG-9, the country's
antiterrorist unit, attempted to arrest suspects Wolfgang Grams, 40, and his
girlfriend Birgit Hogefeld, 37, at the train station in Bad Kleinen, a small
town in eastern Germany. Officials reported that as police closed in, Grams
pulled a pistol, killed an officer and was then gunned down in the brief
shootout that followed.
There it might have ended, except eyewitness accounts and leaks by investigators
painting a picture of bungling, murder, and cover-up. The scandal has ruined
the careers of high government officials, and two GSG-9 men are under
investigation for allegedly shooting Grams in cold blood as he lay helpless on
track 4 of the Bad Kleinen station. The Red Army Faction, which had indicated
that it might abandon violence, says that it will assume its assassination
tactics. The future of GSG-9 is in doubt, and Grams has become a martyr among
young German leftists.
The events leading up to the Bad Kleinen incident began last year when Bonn
issued a controversial appeal for a cease-fire to the R.A.F. Its leaders
responded by promising to stop murdering high government and business officials.
The overture, though, led to a lapse by the terrorists: they made contact with
leftist sympathizers, who might serve as go-betweens in talks with the
government. One was Klaus Steinmetz, 33. What the R.A.F. did not know was that
Steinmetz had been a police informant for several years.
He made further contacts among the Red Army Faction leadership and on June 27
told GSG-9 he was to meet Hogefeld and Grams at the Bad Kleinen. While Steinmetz
and his R.A.F. companions sat talking in the station restaurant, 54 officers
deployed around the building to close in as the three departed. The police
botched the job. When they pounced, they grabbed Hogefeld and Steinmetz,
believing him to be Grams. Instead of fleeing, though, Grams drew a pistol
from his waistband and opened fire. One officer was wounded; a second fell
dead. Officers saw Grams "suddenly fall backward" from the station platform
onto track 4. A medical team tried to treat his wounds as Grams lay sprawled
across the ties, but he died on the spot from a head wound.
Outside the official investigation, a different story began to circulate. News
organizations quoted two witnesses as saying policemen held Grams down after he
was captured and shot him to death at point-blank range. Said Joanna Baron, a
sales clerk at a station food stand: "Two policemen walked up to Grams, who was
lying motionless. One bent over and shot him several times from close up. Then
the second officer shot at Grams, but more at his stomach and legs. He shot
several times." The subsequent medical examination supported eyewitness accounts
: it showed that the shot that caused the fatal wound to Grams head was fired
from close range.
Interior Minister Rudolph Seiters, a confidant of Chancellor Helmut Kohl's took
responsibility for mishandling the case and resigned in July, closely followed
by chief federal prosecutor, Alexander Von Stahl. The head of the antiterrorism
division, Rainer Hoffmeyer, has been sharply criticized and may be forced to
resign. There have been so many demands for reforming or disbanding GSG-9 that
Kohl paid a highly publicized visit to the unit to praise the dead officer and
deplore "attempts to make a martyr of his murderer."
The Red Army Faction may have gained a new vitality. "If you don't allow us...
to live," said an R.A.F. communique, "then you must understand that your elites
also cannot live." The groups leadership has once again gone to ground, and
security forces are on the alert. More assassination attempts, officials warn,
can be expected.