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Sagsmappe

NSU Terror: 10 Murders and Years of Police Failure

How institutional racism blinded German authorities to a far-right killing spree

Der NSU-Komplex: Neun Morde, ein Jahrzehnt der Ermittlungsfehler
BEVIS

Klassifikation:

NSU
Nationalsocialistisk Undergrund
Terrorism
racistiske drab
politifejl
tysk ekstremisme

Quick Facts

Gerningsmand(e)Uwe Mundlos, Uwe Böhnhardt, Beate Zschäpe
Offer(e)Enver Şimşek, Abdurrahim Özüdoğru, Süleyman Taşköprü, Habil Kılıç, Mehmet Turgut, İsmail Yaşar, Theodoros Boulgarides, Mehmet Kubaşık, Halit Yozgat, Michèle Kiesewetter
GerningsstedNürnberg, Hamburg, München, Rostock, Dortmund, Kassel, Heilbronn, Tyskland
Gerningsdato2000-09-09 til 2007-04-25
ForbrydelsestypeTerrorisme, seriedrab, bombeangreb

Between September 2000 and April 2006, the far-right terror group National Socialist Underground (NSU) committed nine cold-blooded, premeditated murders of migrants across Germany. On September 9, 2000, flower shop owner Enver Şimşek was shot at his stand in Nuremberg. It marked the beginning of a ruthless killing spree.

A Murder Series Spanning Germany

Abdurrahim Özüdoğru was killed in his shawarma restaurant in Nuremberg; weeks later Süleyman Taşköprü was murdered in Hamburg. The group used the same weapon—a Ceska 83 pistol—in all nine murders. Habil Kılıç was shot in his cigar shop in Munich, Mehmet Turgut was killed in Rostock, and both İsmail Yaşar and Theodoros Boulgarides were murdered in 2005. The final two victims were Mehmet Kubaşık in Dortmund and Halit Yozgat in Kassel in April 2006.

Bombings and the Police Murder That Solved Everything

Beyond the shootings, NSU was responsible for multiple bomb attacks. A letter bomb exploded in Cologne in May 2004, and nail bomb attacks targeted the Keupstraße district. In 2004, Gençay Özcan was seriously wounded.

Timeline

9 September 2000

First NSU Murder

Flower shop owner Enver Şimşek is shot at his stand in the Nuremberg area

13 June 2001

Murder in Nuremberg

Abdurrahim Özüdoğru is killed in his shawarma restaurant

27 June 2001

Murder in Hamburg

Süleyman Taşköprü is murdered in his shawarma restaurant

19 May 2004

Letter Bomb in Cologne

NSU carries out bomb attack against civilians in Cologne

6 April 2006

Final Migrant Murder

Halit Yozgat is killed in his internet café in Kassel

25 April 2007

Police Officer Murdered

Michèle Kiesewetter is shot in Heilbronn—the murder that solved the entire case

4 November 2011

NSU Exposed

Mundlos and Böhnhardt die, Zschäpe turns herself in. NSU group is revealed

6 May 2013

Major Trial Begins

Beate Zschäpe is brought to trial for ten murders and membership in a terrorist organization

11 July 2018

Life Sentence

Beate Zschäpe is sentenced to life imprisonment. Sentence becomes final in 2022

What finally unraveled the entire case was the murder of police officer Michèle Kiesewetter in Heilbronn on April 25, 2007. Her colleague Martin Volz was seriously wounded. When the murder weapon was later examined, it proved identical to the weapon used in the earlier murders—the breakthrough that cracked the case wide open.

Police Pursued the Wrong Leads

German police made monumental errors in this investigation. Instead of examining a racist motive, officers suspected organized crime or a "pizza mafia" was behind the murders. The media dubbed it the "pizza murder series"—a grave disrespect to the victims and their families.

The victims' families knew from the start these were racist murders, but police dismissed them. Journalists from the newspaper Hürriyet wrote in 2006: "According to German police, the killer is from the Turkish mafia—according to Turks, it's a racist old German policeman."

Police treated all witnesses with the same brush as "Turks," despite victims coming from different communities—Turks, Kurds, and Greeks. The racist narrative that victims' families weren't cooperating ended up criminalizing the victims themselves.

The Breakthrough Came Abruptly

The murder spree ended suddenly on November 4, 2011. Following a failed bank robbery in Eisenach, Uwe Mundlos and Uwe Böhnhardt took their own lives in a camper van. Beate Zschäpe set fire to their shared apartment in Zwickau and later turned herself in to police.

Quick Facts

Gerningsmand(e)Uwe Mundlos, Uwe Böhnhardt, Beate Zschäpe
Offer(e)Enver Şimşek, Abdurrahim Özüdoğru, Süleyman Taşköprü, Habil Kılıç, Mehmet Turgut, İsmail Yaşar, Theodoros Boulgarides, Mehmet Kubaşık, Halit Yozgat, Michèle Kiesewetter
GerningsstedNürnberg, Hamburg, München, Rostock, Dortmund, Kassel, Heilbronn, Tyskland
Gerningsdato2000-09-09 til 2007-04-25
ForbrydelsestypeTerrorisme, seriedrab, bombeangreb
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Investigation of the fire revealed extensive evidence: weapons, a manifesto video, and documentation of all the murders. The German public was shocked—both by the killings and by the complete systemic failure of security agencies.

A Mammoth Trial Lasting Five Years

On May 6, 2013, one of Germany's largest trials since World War II began. Beate Zschäpe was the sole surviving member of the core group and faced charges for ten murders and membership in a terrorist organization.

The trial continued for over five years. On July 11, 2018, Zschäpe was sentenced to life imprisonment for complicity in ten murders and membership in a terrorist organization. The sentence became final in 2022.

The NSU Complex: Institutional Racism in the Security System

The case became known as the "NSU Complex"—a term reflecting the interweaving of far-right terror, institutional racism, and failure by German security authorities. Multiple parliamentary committees attempted to investigate the role of the constitutional protection agency and possible connections to informants.

Victims' families continue fighting for full answers. Many questions remain unanswered: Who supported the group underground? Why were archives destroyed? What role did constitutional protection informants play in the NSU network?

The NSU Complex demonstrates how institutional racism can prevent crime investigation—with deadly consequences for victims and traumatic consequences for families wrongly suspected for years.