Marianne Bachmeier: The Mother Who Shot Her Daughter's Killer in Court
Mor skød sin datters voldtægtsmand i retten

Mor skød sin datters voldtægtsmand i retten

Background
Marianne Bachmeier was a 31-year-old single mother from Lübeck in what was then West Germany. On 5 May 1980, her seven-year-old daughter Anna Bachmeier was raped and murdered by 35-year-old Klaus Grabowski, a previously convicted sex offender who had lived in the same neighbourhood. Grabowski had lured the young girl to his home, where he carried out the horrific crime and subsequently strangled her. He hid her body in a box in his attic.
Grabowski was arrested shortly afterwards and confessed to the killing. During the investigation it emerged that he had previously served a prison sentence for the sexual abuse of two girls. After his release he had sought castration in an attempt to control his sexual impulses, but had later undergone hormone treatment to restore his potency.
Anna Bachmeier wird ermordet
Die siebenjährige Anna wird von Klaus Grabowski vergewaltigt und getötet. Er versteckt ihre Leiche auf seinem Dachboden.
Grabowski wird verhaftet
Klaus Grabowski wird festgenommen und gesteht den Mord an Anna Bachmeier.
Schüsse im Gerichtssaal
Marianne Bachmeier erschießt Klaus Grabowski am dritten Verhandlungstag mit sieben Schüssen im Lübecker Gerichtssaal.
Prozessbeginn gegen Bachmeier
Der Prozess gegen Marianne Bachmeier wegen Totschlags beginnt und erregt weltweites Medieninteresse.
Urteil: Sechs Jahre Haft
Marianne Bachmeier wird wegen Totschlags zu sechs Jahren Gefängnis verurteilt.
Vorzeitige Entlassung
Nach drei Jahren wird Bachmeier wegen guter Führung vorzeitig aus der Haft entlassen.
Tod von Marianne Bachmeier
Marianne Bachmeier stirbt im Alter von 46 Jahren an Krebs in Lübeck.
The Shots in the Courtroom
On 6 March 1981, during the third day of Grabowski's trial, Marianne Bachmeier smuggled a 7.65 mm Beretta pistol into the Lübeck courtroom, concealed in her handbag. While the hearing was under way, she suddenly rose from her seat, drew the weapon and fired eight shots at Grabowski. Seven of the bullets struck him — six in the back and one in the neck. He died instantly.
The scene unfolded in full view of the judges, lawyers and spectators. Bachmeier allowed herself to be arrested immediately afterwards without resistance. Her act shocked not only those present in the courtroom but all of Germany, and the story soon spread across the world.
The Trial and Public Sympathy
Marianne Bachmeier was charged with manslaughter, and her trial began in November 1982. The case attracted enormous media attention and became one of the most widely debated criminal proceedings in German legal history. Many people sympathised with Bachmeier and viewed her action as an understandable act of revenge for the loss of her child.
During the trial her defence argued that Bachmeier had acted in the heat of the moment and under extraordinary emotional distress. The prosecution pushed for a murder conviction, but the court found that the act had not been planned with sufficient cold-blooded deliberation to qualify as murder.
In March 1983, Marianne Bachmeier was sentenced to six years in prison for manslaughter. The sentence was relatively lenient given the gravity of the act, reflecting the court's understanding of her circumstances. She was released after three years in 1985 for good behaviour.
Aftermath and Public Debate
The case sparked an intense debate about justice, revenge and the rights of victims. Many felt that Bachmeier had done what the justice system had failed to do — deliver justice for Anna. Others argued that no private citizen may take the law into their own hands, regardless of the circumstances.
After her release, Marianne Bachmeier attempted to live a more private life. She spent periods in Sicily and later wrote her memoirs. Over the years she gave several interviews in which she expressed both remorse for her action and, at the same time, a sense that she had had no other choice.
Marianne Bachmeier died of cancer on 17 September 1996 in Lübeck, aged just 46. Her case remains one of the most prominent examples of vigilante justice in modern European legal history and continues to raise questions about moral and legal boundaries.
International Impact
The case also drew international attention and has since inspired countless discussions about how the justice system handles rape and the murder of children. It has been the subject of documentaries, books and articles around the world. Many still regard the case as a symbol of a mother's desperation and a yearning for justice in a system that can seem inadequate.