The Murder of Walter Lübcke
Tysk politiker myrdet af højreekstremist

Tysk politiker myrdet af højreekstremist

A Prominent Politician Killed
Walter Lübcke was a respected German politician and long-serving chairman of the regional council in Kassel, Hessen. As a member of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and with years of experience in local politics, Lübcke had become a respected figure in German regional politics. He was known for his moderate, inclusive views and his work on refugee integration—particularly after 2015-2016, when Germany admitted over one million asylum seekers.
In October 2015, Lübcke hosted a public event on refugee policy. According to witnesses, he delivered a clear and critical message to critics of the government's open asylum policy. "If one cannot live with the values of our freedom and rule of law, then one is free to leave the country," Lübcke said according to reports. This statement was used against him by far-right extremists and made him a symbol of what they perceived as a "betrayed" Germany.
Lübcke wird zur Zielscheibe
Walter Lübcke erklärt bei einer öffentlichen Veranstaltung, dass Gegner der Flüchtlingspolitik Deutschland verlassen können — eine Bemerkung, die später von Extremisten gegen ihn verwendet wird.
Der Mord an Walter Lübcke
Gegen 23:30 Uhr wird Lübcke auf seiner Terrasse in Wolfhagen-Istha erschossen. Er wird kurz nach der Einlieferung ins Krankenhaus für tot erklärt.
Ermittlungen ohne Ergebnis
Nach fast zwei Wochen ohne Festnahme ist die Identität des Täters noch unbekannt. Die Ermittlungen konzentrieren sich auf verschiedene Theorien.
Stephan Ernst festgenommen
Genetische Beweise führen die Polizei zum Rechtsextremisten Stephan Ernst. Ernst wird verhaftet und gesteht die Tat später in Vernehmungen.
Prozessbeginn
Das Verfahren gegen Stephan Ernst beginnt vor dem Oberlandesgericht Frankfurt. Ernst bestreitet die Handlung nicht, seine Verteidiger argumentieren mit psychischen Problemen.
Urteil: Lebenslange Haft ohne vorzeitige Entlassung
Das Gericht spricht Stephan Ernst ohne mildernde Umstände schuldig. Die Strafe ist lebenslange Haft mit Feststellung der besonderen Schwere der Schuld.
The Night Everything Changed
On the night of June 2, 2019, Walter Lübcke was on the terrace of his home in Wolfhagen-Istha near Kassel with his wife. Around 11:30 p.m., he was shot in the head. The perpetrator fled the scene. Lübcke was transported to a hospital but died from his injuries a few hours later.
It was the first time since the murder of Detlev Karsten Rohwedder in 1991 that a German politician had been killed in a politically motivated attack of this nature. The event sent shockwaves through German politics and society.
The Hunt for the Perpetrator
Police launched a major investigation. Initially without significant results—the motive was unclear, and there were few concrete leads. Theories circulated around international connections, romantic conflicts, and economic crime. Months passed without an arrest.
In June 2019, precisely one year after the murder, the investigation reached a turning point. Police connected genetic evidence to Stephan Ernst, a 45-year-old far-right extremist from the area around Kassel. Ernst had a known background in extremist circles and had previously been charged with illegal weapons possession.
Motive and Ideology
During interrogations, Stephan Ernst confessed to shooting Walter Lübcke. He justified the act with his hatred of the government's refugee policy and his perception of Lübcke as a traitor to Germany. Ernst was a member of far-right extremist networks and had been influenced by radical propaganda against immigrants and asylum policy.
Ernst also had connections to the National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) and other far-right extremist organizations. His motivation reflected a growing trend in German right-wing extremism: attacks against politicians and public figures perceived as opposed to German-national values.
However, intelligence services had not fully focused on this environment before Lübcke's murder. Ernst had been known for minor legal violations but had not been under intensive surveillance for violent extremism prior to Lübcke's killing.
Trial and Verdict
The case came to court in 2020. Stephan Ernst was charged with murder of a particularly serious nature. While Ernst had confessed to the act during interrogations, his defense lawyers attempted to argue for psychological problems and diminished culpability.
However, the court found Ernst fully guilty without mitigating circumstances. In December 2021, Ernst was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole (imposed as a particularly lengthy sentence in German cases with political or ideological motivation). This judgment represents one of the most severe sentences in modern German criminal history for politically motivated violence.
Significance for German Politics and Society
The murder of Walter Lübcke exposed a dark side of German politics: growing far-right extremist violence directed at elected officials and public figures. It sparked critical debate about surveillance of extremist environments, the so-called "Reichsbürger" movement, and the NPD's role in society.
Politicians from both the left and right wings agreed in condemning the violence, but debate over responsibility continued. The right-wing had to examine its own role in creating a climate of hatred and polarized discourse around immigration.
Lübcke has since been remembered as a martyr for democracy, and his name has become associated with the struggle against political extremism in Germany. Right-wing extremism and politically motivated violence have become subjects of more systematic analysis among security authorities.
Subsequent Cases
The Lübcke murder opened eyes to a series of attacks and threats. In 2020, far-right extremist Markus H. was arrested for planning bomb attacks against Green Party politicians. That same year, the Hanau massacre was revealed to be driven by the same ideological hatred of the "foreign."
These events established a pattern: far-right extremist violence was not a one-time occurrence but rather a symptom of systematic radicalization in parts of German society.