Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q531144> ?p ?o }
- Q531144 description "Journalist".
- Q531144 description "Journalist".
- Q531144 subject Q6647483.
- Q531144 subject Q6938403.
- Q531144 subject Q8271668.
- Q531144 subject Q8304138.
- Q531144 subject Q8494807.
- Q531144 subject Q8837093.
- Q531144 abstract "Maureen Cathryn Harriet "Cats" Falck (11 July 1953 – date of death uncertain between November 1984 and May 1985) was a Swedish television journalist who, together with her friend Lena Gräns, disappeared in Stockholm in 1984 while she was investigating a scandal comprising the smuggling of weapons from Sweden to communist states in Eastern Europe. The dead bodies of Falck and Gräns were later found at the bottom of the Hammarby Canal in Stockholm. The deaths remain unsolved but later reports claim that they were assassinated in a state-sponsored operation by agents from East Germany.Cats Falck was born in Enskede in Stockholm, Sweden. Falck and her friend Lena Gräns were last observed by witnesses as they left the restaurant Öhrns Hörn ("Öhrn's Corner") at the crossing of Folkungagatan–Borgmästargatan at Södermalm in Stockholm, at approximately 21.30 CET on 18 November 1984. On 29 May 1985, their bodies were found in a car (a white Renault owned by Lena Gräns) on the bottom of the Hammarby Canal at Norra Hammarbyhamnen in southern Stockholm. The Swedish police, who had been working from several hypothetical theories, closed the case as an "accident". At the time of her disappearance, Falck, who was employed as a reporter for the Swedish public service television news programme Rapport, was investigating a major scandal comprising the Swedish company ASEA and smuggling of weapons to communist states in Eastern Europe. Prior to her disappearance, Falck had told her work-mates and her fiancé (the author Lasse Strömstedt) that she was about to reveal "something big".In April 1997, the Swedish Security Service received an anonymous letter sent from Germany in which it was claimed that the former East German secret police Stasi had carried out the killings. In the letter, which was written in English, two retired Stasi officials and four other East German government officials were named, while the purported death squad was said to have consisted of three persons. The alleged motive behind the assassination was that Falck had received sensitive information about a secret weapons affair between the Swedish weapons manufacturer Bofors and East Germany. In the letter, Stasi was further blamed for the death of the Swedish weapons inspector Carl-Fredrik Algernon, the chief investigator of the Bofors scandal, in the Stockholm Metro in 1987. In June 1997 the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter wrote a series of articles based on the new information from the letter, which prompted the Swedish police to take a new look at the case. The case also received much attention in German media and prompted the German Federal Police to open an investigation.In September 2003, a 53-year-old German citizen, named as "Jürgen G" in a press release from the German Prosecutor-General, was arrested in Berlin suspected of having been a member of a group that carried out a number of assassinations on orders from the East German government from 1976 to 1987. According to an article in the German newspaper Berliner Zeitung, the suspicions against the man also involved the murder of Cats Falck and Lena Gräns. According to the article, the alleged death squad had operated directly under the East German government and not under Stasi as it was claimed in the earlier letter. The group had entered Sweden on false passports via West Germany and Denmark and then sought contact with Falck in Stockholm. There they had met up at the restaurant where Falck and Gräns were allegedly poisoned, placed in their car and then dumped into the Hammarby Canal. On 15 December 2003 the man was released from custody due to lack of evidence. The German investigation was closed in 2006.An investigation made by reporter Christoph Andersson on behalf of Sveriges Radio, the Swedish public service radio broadcasting service, found that Falck had been investigating the export of isostatic presses, which can be used in the manufacture of nuclear weapons, to Eastern Germany and the Stasi controlled enterprise AHB Elektronik Import Export.".
- Q531144 alias "Falck, Maureen Cathryn Harriet (full name)".
- Q531144 birthDate "1953-07-11".
- Q531144 birthPlace Q1754.
- Q531144 birthPlace Q34.
- Q531144 birthPlace Q606458.
- Q531144 birthYear "1953".
- Q531144 deathDate "1984-11-18".
- Q531144 deathPlace Q1754.
- Q531144 deathPlace Q3126518.
- Q531144 deathPlace Q34.
- Q531144 deathYear "1984".
- Q531144 employer Q215363.
- Q531144 occupation Q1930187.
- Q531144 partner Q464481.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q10185.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q1126918.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q11995938.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q12802.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q1331110.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q153846.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q1543058.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q1601582.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q16957.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q1754.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q1777570.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q183.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q1930187.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q215363.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q25989.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q272926.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q27468.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q289.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q3126518.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q3354931.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q34.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q35.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q464481.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q5039759.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q5124991.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q5154550.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q52665.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q5464624.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q56026.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q606458.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q64.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q6647483.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q6686.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q675430.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q6938403.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q713750.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q740149.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q8271668.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q8304138.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q8494807.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q8837093.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q890351.
- Q531144 wikiPageWikiLink Q890353.
- Q531144 alternativeNames "Falck, Maureen Cathryn Harriet".
- Q531144 birthDate "1953-07-11".
- Q531144 birthPlace Q1754.
- Q531144 birthPlace Q34.
- Q531144 birthPlace Q606458.
- Q531144 dateOfBirth "1953-07-11".
- Q531144 dateOfDeath "1984-11-18".
- Q531144 deathDate "--11-18".
- Q531144 employer Q215363.
- Q531144 name "Falck, Cats".
- Q531144 name "Maureen Cathryn Harriet Falck".
- Q531144 occupation Q1930187.
- Q531144 partner Q464481.
- Q531144 placeOfBirth Q1754.
- Q531144 placeOfBirth Q34.
- Q531144 placeOfBirth Q606458.
- Q531144 placeOfDeath Q1754.
- Q531144 placeOfDeath Q3126518.
- Q531144 placeOfDeath Q34.
- Q531144 shortDescription "Journalist".
- Q531144 type Person.
- Q531144 type Agent.
- Q531144 type Person.
- Q531144 type Agent.
- Q531144 type NaturalPerson.
- Q531144 type Thing.
- Q531144 type Q215627.
- Q531144 type Q5.
- Q531144 type Person.
- Q531144 comment "Maureen Cathryn Harriet "Cats" Falck (11 July 1953 – date of death uncertain between November 1984 and May 1985) was a Swedish television journalist who, together with her friend Lena Gräns, disappeared in Stockholm in 1984 while she was investigating a scandal comprising the smuggling of weapons from Sweden to communist states in Eastern Europe. The dead bodies of Falck and Gräns were later found at the bottom of the Hammarby Canal in Stockholm.".
- Q531144 label "Cats Falck".
- Q531144 givenName "Cats".
- Q531144 name "Cats Falck".
- Q531144 name "Falck, Cats".