The 1980 Oktoberfest Bombing
Bombeangreb på Münchens største festival kostede 13 mennesker livet

Sagsdetaljer
Quick Facts
The Attack
On 26 September 1980, Oktoberfest was approaching its annual peak beneath a clear Bavarian sky. At around 7:20 in the evening, thousands of festival-goers were moving through the Theresienwiese grounds, where the festival has been held since 1810. A metal pipe packed with nails and explosives was detonated at the entrance to the site. The blast was enormous, destroying everything in its immediate vicinity.
The 13 victims included 11 festival-goers and 2 police officers. Among the dead were children, young people and elderly visitors. More than 200 people were wounded — many of them seriously. Approximately 70 of the injured were under the age of 16. It was one of the worst terrorist attacks in West Germany's twentieth-century history.
The Investigation and Gundolf Köhler
German authorities launched a massive investigation. Forensic examiners were quickly able to determine that the bomb had been placed by a person who was killed in the blast. The remains were identified as those of Gundolf Köhler, a 21-year-old man with ties to far-right extremist circles.
Köhler had been a member of, or had expressed sympathies toward, far-right extremism in Germany and militant neo-Nazi groups. He had previously been arrested for minor offences and had been under police surveillance. His motives and any potential accomplices became the subject of intensive scrutiny.
It was never fully established, however, whether Köhler had acted alone or as part of a larger network. The investigation pointed to possible connections with far-right organisations, but the was never sufficient to bring charges against any other individuals. Theories about state involvement — including from German intelligence services and potential foreign actors — circulated for years afterward.


