Ursula and Curt Müller

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Ursula Müller (born December 8, 1933 ) and her husband Curt Müller (born June 19, 1930 , † November 22, 2018 ) are or were German activists in the neo-Nazi scene . You live in Mainz-Gonsenheim .

Activities in the right-wing extremist spectrum

Both spouses began their activities in the right-wing extremist scene in the 1960s and co-founded the "NS-Kampfgruppe Mainz" in the late 1960s. After 1964, Curt Müller was involved in the Resistance Campaign and ran for the NPD in the 1972 federal election . In the 1970s, both leadership cadres of the NSDAP structural organization , their family property was declared a base of the NSDAP Rhineland-Palatinate. A little later they worked closely with Michael Kühnen and in the 1980s became active in the committee preparing the celebrations for the 100th birthday of Adolf Hitler (KAH) and the community of ideas of the New Front (GdNF). Also in the 1980s Ursula Müller was the chairwoman of the “German Women's Front” (DFF). At that time both were among the leading activists of the " Aid Organization for National Political Prisoners and Their Relatives " (HNG), one of the largest and most influential organizations of neo-Nazism in Germany. In 1991 Ursula Müller took over the chairmanship of the HNG. Since then she has also appeared as a speaker at events of the right-wing extremist scene, for example at an event organized by the NPD on May 27, 2000 under the motto “2. Day of National Resistance ”in the Nibelungenhalle in Passau, in which around 4,000 people took part.

During this time, both spouses maintained close contact with " military sports groups " throughout the Federal Republic as well as with many neo-Nazi parties and organizations such as the "National Popular Front" (NVF), Freedom German Workers' Party (FAP), "German Alternative" (DA) and " Aktion Front Nationaler" Socialists / National Activists ”(ANS / NA). In addition, they maintained international contacts, for example with the Ku Klux Klan , the National Socialist Movement and the World Union of National Socialists (WUNS). In 1976, Gary Lauck was arrested while visiting the Müller family, and 20,000 NSDAP stickers were seized.

The miller's property in Mainz-Gonsenheim

The Müller couple's house and the adjacent nursery they operated in Mainz-Gonsenheim was a well-known meeting place for the neo-Nazi scene of national importance until the mid-1990s. Often there were celebrations for the solstice or the “ Führer birthday ”, at which up to 350 neo-Nazis from all over Germany and neighboring countries were present. Since the ban on the “summer solstice celebration” on June 17, 1993, no such neo-Nazi meetings have taken place. Nevertheless, the property continues to serve as a base for the West German neo-Nazi scene, for example for the coordination and organization office " Resistance West ", which is active in the federal states of North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate . The house also served as a repository for propaganda material and as an arsenal. During a house search in 1982, so extensive material was found that it had to be removed by truck. A swastika made of flowers could also be seen in the garden of the property.

Convictions

Both Ursula and Curt Müller have multiple criminal records. In the 1970s, Curt Müller was convicted of property damage, insult, perjury, willful assault, incitement to racial hatred, sedition and the use of symbols of anti-constitutional organizations and served a six-month prison sentence. He later seriously injured a person in the eye who had removed anti-Semitic and neo-Nazi propaganda from a notice at the Müller's house with a brass knuckle and was later sentenced to a fine of 1,000 DM.

For example, Ursula Müller was sentenced on probation in May 1999 for inciting racial hatred.

literature

  • Verfassungsschutz reports 1982 (published 1983), pp. 131, 133 (and the following, initially under the keyword neo-Nazi circle around Curt Müller or neo- Nazi circle around Curt Müller ).
  • Kurt Hirsch: Right from the Union. People, organizations, parties since 1945. A lexicon . Knesebeck & Schuler, Munich 1989 (p. 414–415; on the German women's front p. 39/40; NSDAP / AO Rheinland-Pfalz p. 96; HNG p. 272) ISBN 3-926901-22-5

Individual evidence

  1. [1] Merkurist report on his death two years ago
  2. Founded in 1984 by Thomas Brehl , Kurt Hirsch: Rechts von der Union . Munich 1989, p. 78
  3. Constitutional Protection Report 1985 . P. 154 and 1988, p. 125; Kurt Hirsch: Right from the Union . 1989, p. 39/40. The DFF was founded in January 1984 and merged in September 1986 with the (neo-Nazi) German Girls Association to form the DFF / MB
  4. Constitutional Protection Report 1991 . P. 100, 103. Her husband became an assessor
  5. Constitutional Protection Report 2000  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 2.0 MB)@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / starweb.hessen.de  
  6. z. B. on an aerial photo on Google Maps: http://maps.google.de/maps?q=49.99555,8.211725&hl=de&ll=49.995552,8.21172&spn=0.00096,0.003195&num=1&t=h&z=19

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