Christian Klar was a leading member of the 2nd Generation of the Baader Meinhof gang (Red Army Faction) in Germany. In 1982 he was captured and taken into custody and in 1985 after a lengthy judiciary process he was sentenced to a total of 5 life sentences plus 15 years imprisonment. In 1992 an extra 5 years was added to his sentence. No wonder he looks so gloomy in the press photo taken in the 1992 and provided by the European Press Agency:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/germany-in-shock-at-release-of-baadermeinhof-killer-1033807.html
Klar must have been quite jubilant when, in 1997, his minimum sentence was set at 26 years. He and his RAF chums waged war on Germany's post-war establishment, which they saw as perpertrating the evils of the Nazi era under the guise of democracy. Seems a bit ott (over the top) to me. But, let’s be clear, his crimes were considerable. Klar, 56, was jailed for multiple murders, including the killing of federal prosecutor Siegfried Buback in April 1977. Other killings in which Mr. Klar was implicated include industrialist Hanns-Martin Schleyer and banker Jürgen Ponto.
Klar’s misguided politics led him to commit outrageous crimes. He has never expressed remorse for his actions or clarified any details about the assassinations and kidnappings. On the other hand it has been pointed out that a number of ‘lesser’ Nazi war criminals got away with lighter sentences. Klar will have spent 26 years in prison, some of them in solitary confinement (the details here are a bit elusive). Furthermore, judges at the Stuttgart state court are convinced that Klar no longer poses a threat to society. "The court no longer has any evidence to suggest that Christian Klar will commit future crimes," they said. He is to be freed on 3 January 2009 and he will remain ‘on probation’ for a further 5 years.
Do you think, like me, that the release of Herr Klar is a reasonable humanitarian action?
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