A 28-year-old German student is standing trial in Dresden accused of founding a criminal organization and committing six serious attacks on neo-Nazis, in an unusual case of violent left-wing extremism in Germany.

State prosecutors say Lina E.* and her three co-defendants — Lennart A., Philipp M., and Jannis R. — carried out a series of attacks on neo-Nazis in the eastern states of Thuringia and Saxony between 2018 and 2020, including two attacks on Leon R., a notorious far-right extremist who was himself arrested for allegedly forming a far-right extremist organization.

The group around Lina E. is believed to have raided a well-known neo-Nazi bar in the town of Eisenach in late 2019 and attacked Leon R. with hammers and batons. When the initial attack failed, the group attacked him again a few weeks later outside his car. Other neo-Nazis were left with broken bones and other injuries after the attacks.

Prosecutors are asking for an  eight year prison term for Lina E., who has already spent well over two years behind bars as the long and complicated trial continued, and up to 3 years and 9 months in prison for the co-defendants. The defense called for Lina E. to be convicted only of the lesser charges of attempted bodily injury and theft.

The case has created plenty of political tension, with the defense and far-left scenes in Lina E.'s home city of Leipzig saying that she has been scapegoated as a left-wing terrorist by both the media and the authorities. Many allege that the justice system is too lenient on neo-Nazi perpetrators.

The state prosecutors say Lina E. is still extremely dangerous. Leading prosecutor Alexandra Geilhorn said the defendant had shown no remorse and had not distanced herself from her left-wing ideology. The prosecutor also described what she called the "severe violence" of the attacks, carried out with an "extraordinary extent of criminal energy," coupled with a "notable measure of callousness."

If any German comrade knows how to support her defense, you should drop a link.

  • AcidSmiley [she/her]
    ·
    1 年前

    For context, Saxony may very well be the worst out of all German states when it comes to fascist organizing, nazi violence, far right rallies and electoral success of the rightwing AfD party. Since the former DDR was annexed by the post-fascist west, the state has been constantly governed by the worst horseshoe theory conservatives that have bred a massive problem with nazi-affiliated cops, judges, attorneys and intelligence personell while nazi orgs could form at best largely unmolested and at worst under active help from LEOs. Right wing terrorism in Saxony regularly costs lives, the most egregious example in recent years being some terminally online edgelord who tried to shoot up a synagogue, failed to get through the locked entrance door and then just shot a bunch of random passersby until he was arrested.

    The antifa scene in Leipzig can rightfully be seen as a besieged leftist stronghold deep within hostile territory, the Connewitz neighborhood saw violent assaults by literally hundreds of marauding nazi skins as well as a steadily increasing number of police raids and it's an absolute farce how much traction this case is getting in the media.