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Frankfurt, Germany: police chief justifies torture
By Justus Leicht
8 July 2004
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At the end of June, the Frankfurt regional criminal court upheld
the charges against police chief superintendent Wolfgang Daschner.
One and a half years have passed since proceedings were first
launched against the officer, and a trial is expected by November
this year at the earliest.
In October 2002, Daschner had threatened to inflict serious
pain upon the kidnapper of 11-year-old bankers son Jakob
von Metzler if he did not reveal where he had hidden the child.
The threat worked, however; the child was already dead. As Daschner
proudly explained later, he was prepared to carry out his threat.
He had even written a memorandum in the files and called for a
police martial arts expert.
What is remarkable is that Daschner is not being charged for
threatening torture.
Paragraph 343 of the Criminal Code is entitled the extortion
of statements and reads: Those who, as an officeholder
involved in criminal proceedings ... physically abuse another,
otherwise use violence, threaten violence or employ mental torment
in order to obtain a statement from him or to ensure he desists
from making a statement, are punishable with imprisonment from
one to ten years.
Daschner, however, is merely accused of coercion in a serious
abuse of office.
The public prosecutors office justified this charge by
claiming Daschner had not been trying to elicit a confession,
but rather was merely concerned with saving the life of
the child. Although such sophistry is neither reflected
in the appropriate section of the criminal code, which makes no
such differentiation, nor in legal commentary, the prosecutors
statement was uncritically accepted throughout the German media.
The essential differences between the offences are twofold:
Firstly, the offence of coercion contains the so-called reprehensibility
clause, i.e., using violence or threats to force someone
to behave in a specific manner is not automatically illegal, but
only when the court expressly determines the reprehensibility
of the coercive actions. In cases of the extortion of statements,
this reprehensible action is taken as given, in that the police
have used illegal means in attempting to make someone talk.
The extortion of statements is punishable by at least one years
imprisonment and is thus a criminal offence; cases of aggravated
coercion are punishable by at least six months imprisonment and
are therefore a misdemeanour. Those found guilty of committing
a criminal offence automatically lose their status as a state
official. But if Daschner were condemned for aggravated coercion
this would be at the discretion of the court.
The grounds cited in the charges leave doubts, however, whether
the public prosecutors office even regards Daschners
behaviour as at all reprehensible.
His superior, the Frankfurt chief of police, insists that Daschner
acted in an emergency situation. Legally this is untenable,
since Daschner did not find himself in an exceptional situation,
but in one covered explicitly by police regulations and the law.
A police officer is not permitted to act in the same way as might
a desperate family member, who by chance ended up in a life-threatening
situation and could not expect assistance from the state.
Nevertheless, most of Daschners defenders argue as if
preliminary investigations in serious criminal offences where
human lives are at stake were a completely new phenomenon, in
which legislators had never considered the prohibition of torture
and arbitrary action. Everyone knows that murder and manslaughter,
kidnapping and terrorism, treason and high treason existed long
before todays penal codes. The same applies to torture and
the death penalty.
On the other hand, what is relatively new from a historical
standpoint is the limitation of the states recourse to violence
against alleged or actual criminalsa product of the Enlightenment,
democratic revolutions and the workers movement. The widespread
acceptance of this concept was assisted by the experiences of
the fascist dictatorships in the Second World War, especially
in Western Europe and the US.
Today, under conditions where the world is being re-colonised
in a series of brutal wars of conquest and divided up by the Western
powers, achievements such as the ban on torture, democracy and
the rule of law are increasingly regarded as outdated within ruling
circles.
This was clearly expressed by Michael Wolffsohn, a professor
at the German Federal Armed Forces Academy. In a television interview
in May, Wolffsohn said he condemned the torture carried out at
the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, while adding: I consider
torture or the menace of torture legitimate as one of the means
employed against terrorists, yes indeed! And further, We
are in a completely new world-historical situation; we must completely
rethink things and then come to conclusions that perhaps may not
please us. I do not say that thinking about this gives me any
pleasure, but I must consider the new situation.
When the interviewing journalist reminded Wolffsohn that, in
Iraq or elsewhere, hostile fighters could always be classified
as terrorists rather than enemy soldiers, he said
that strictly speaking, each civilian could not be differentiated
from resistance fighters and these could not be differentiated
from terrorists: After the official end of fighting in Iraq,
there was a mixture of normal resistance, urban guerrilla warfare
and terrorism and one had to proceed differently in combating
the different acts of violence. If, for example, a pregnant woman
were clearly embarked upon an act of terrorism, then exploits
her position as a pregnant women and blows herself up along with
many others, one cannot behave as if dealing with normal civilians.
In other words, it is legitimate in an occupied country for
occupying armies even to torture pregnant women since they may
be embarked upon acts of terrorism, i.e., an assassination
attempt against the occupiers!
After Wolffsohn encountered substantial opposition to his stance
by sections of the media and the public, Defence Secretary Peter
Struck (Social Democratic PartySPD) called the professor
for talks at his ministrybut that was all. Wolffsohn commented
afterwards they had held a clarifying discussion in
a pleasant atmosphere. He said he had not apologised
nor taken anything back. In a press statement, he stressed, Considerations
whether torture is permissible remain for him legitimate.
Moreover, he pointed out that he is not alone and referred
to a number of other intellectuals, legal experts and German politicians
who have recently argued in favour of curtailing democratic rights
in the war on terror: The discussion regarding
the legitimacy of possible preventive measures against terrorists
has long been under way among lawyers and politicians nationally
and internationally. For example, I can recall Harvard professors
Dershowitz and Ignatieff, Heidelberg lawyer Brugger, the latest
edition of the legal commentary on the constitution by Maunz-Duerig-Herzog,
also former prime minister Ernst Albrecht in 1976 as well as [former
SPD chairman] Oskar Lafontaine.
See Also:
Germany: Former SPD chairman
Lafontaine defends police torture
[3 June 2004]
German police, judges
argue for admissibility of torture
[8 March 2003]
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