Juliane Plambeck

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Juliane Plambeck (born July 16, 1952 in Freiburg im Breisgau ; † July 25, 1980 near Bietigheim-Bissingen ) was a German terrorist . She was a member of the June 2nd Movement and from 1980 a member of the Red Army Faction (RAF).

Life

On September 9, 1975, she was arrested together with Inge Viett and Ralf Reinders in a shop in Berlin . She was accused of participating in the Lorenz kidnapping . Together with Inge Viett, Gabriele Rollnik and Monika Berberich , she fled from the Lehrter Strasse women's prison in Berlin on July 7, 1976 .

Plambeck and Wolfgang Beer were killed in a traffic accident on July 25, 1980. The accident occurred near the village of Unterriexingen . At around 7:15 a.m., the stolen wine-red VW Golf got onto the left side of the lane for an unexplained cause, where it collided with an oncoming gravel transporter. In addition to forged identity papers and license plates , several weapons were found in the vehicle involved in the accident , one of which is said to have been used in the kidnapping of the employer's president Hanns Martin Schleyer in 1977, a Polish submachine gun PM-63 .

In the apartment in Heidelberg rented by Plambeck, among other things, strategy papers were found that were assigned to the terrorists Brigitte Mohnhaupt and Christian Klar .

Plambeck was first buried in the Dornhaldenfriedhof in Stuttgart- Degerloch . Her grave is now in Karlsruhe- Rüppurr . The inscription on her tombstone is borrowed from Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche and reads: “You desperate! How much courage do you give those who watch you! "

Individual evidence

  1. Peter Henkel: Juliane Plambeck killed in accident . Frankfurter Rundschau , July 26, 1980
  2. ^ The Fasching Ball on Saturday, February 28th . In: Der Spiegel . No. 9 , 1981 ( online ).