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DBpedia 2016-04

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Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "The NSU Trial is the trial against several people in connection with the National Socialist Underground (NSU) – an extreme-right terrorist organization in Germany – and the NSU murders. It has been taking place since 6 May 2013 in Munich in the 6th Criminal Division of the Munich Higher Regional Court before five professional judges.Accused are Beate Zschäpe and four suspected helpers and supporters: André Eminger, Holger Gerlach, Carsten Schultze and former NPD official Ralf Wohlleben.Zschäpe must answer charges of, inter alia, being a principal in ten murders and a serious arson and of being a member of a terrorist organization.André Eminger is accused, inter alia, of being an accessory in the nail bomb attack in Cologne in 2004.Holger Gerlach is accused, inter alia, of being an accessory by providing false documents for the so-called NSU trio.Carsten Schultze is accused, inter alia, of being an accessory by providing the NSU trio with arms.Ralf Wohlleben is accused, inter alia, of being an accessory by providing the NSU trio with arms.A critical issue for Zschäpe may be the differentiation in German law between principal and accessory. In her case it may hinge on the interpretation of the word \"gemeinschaftlich\" as used in Section 25 of the German Penal Code. In the Red Army Faction trials three of its members were found guilty of being principals, even though it wasn't known which of them had done what, because they were part of a unit whose combined goal it was to carry out the attacks for which they were charged. On these grounds it would seem possible that Zschäpe could be convicted as a principal. The jurist Claus Roxin, however, believes that a principal must in some way be in control of the illegal act, something commonly believed to be beyond Zschäpe's participation.Although a Parliamentary Committee of Inquiry into the NSU is said to confirm that German authorities were not involved and did not cover up the NSU killings, doubts remain. Was it pure chance that a member of the German intelligence service just happened to be at the scene of at least one of the murders, seemingly at the very minutes while it was carried out? Does the fact that work colleagues of the murdered policewoman Michèle Kiesewetter were members of the Ku-Klux-Klan and that she lived close to a public house frequented by the extreme-right not raise questions? Why does forensic and other evidence for the deaths of Böhnhardt and Mundlos, the other two alleged principals in the case, in the motor-caravan not add up? The German government, domestic intelligence and the police, it is thought, will also be on trial."@en }

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