Marianne Bachmeier entered a courtroom in Lubeck, Germany, on March 6, 1981, with a sense of purpose in every step that she chose to take.
Then, all of a sudden, she reached into her purse and pulled out a loaded revolver, and she fired fire on Klaus Grabowski, a sexual defendant who was 35 years old.
The individual had been suspected of kidnapping, abusing, and ultimately killing Anna Bachmeier, who was seven years old and the daughter of Marianne Bachmeier.
Within a few seconds, Grabowski sucked his last breath and passed away on the floor of the courtroom. He had been struck by seven of Marianne’s bullets a few moments earlier.
The furious mother was taken into custody without delay, but she did not exhibit any signs of remorse. Forty years after its initial publication, the phrase “Revenge mum” continues to linger in people’s minds, and her sentence continues to split an entire nation…
One of the most devastating experiences that a parent can go through is the death of a child, which is frequently referred to as the ultimate tragedy.
The 5th of May, 1980 was the day that Marianne Bachmeier’s life was irrevocably altered. During the 1980s, Marianne was a struggle-stricken single mother who managed a tavern in Lubeck, which is located in northern Germany.
Marianne’s own childhood was marred by tragedy and a number of traumatic experiences. One of the most notorious organisations in Nazi Germany, the Waffen-SS, was one of the groups that her father had been a part of previously.
As she was growing up, she had been sexually assaulted by a number of different males. Marianne developed a pregnancy while she was only 16 years old. She made the decision to place the infant for adoption when she was a teenager since she was unable to raise the child on her own. Marianne became pregnant for the second time when she was 18 years old, and she once again gave her child up for adoption to a placement agency.
The year 1973 marked the birth of Marianne’s third child, a daughter whom she named Anna. Marianne continued to be a single mother, but she was responsible for Anna’s upbringing on her own.
Anna was described as a “happy, open-minded child” by various sources; nonetheless, it was sad that she and her family would encounter a horrific catastrophe in the near future.
The disagreement between Anna and Marianne took place in May of 1980. As an alternative to going to school, the young girl made the decision to stroll to the residence of a friend. However, when Anna was on her way there, she was taken captive by Klaus Grabowski, a local butcher who was then 35 years old.
Before finally putting an end to Anna’s life by strangling her, Grabowski confined her to his flat for a number of hours and subjected her to physical and emotional abuse. The person who was responsible for Anna’s death placed her body inside a box and then concealed it in a concealed location on the bank of a canal after committing the crime.
After some time had passed, Grabowski went back to the area in order to bury the body of his victim. However, he was taken into custody that very same evening at his favourite pub in Lubeck, after his fiancee reported him to the authorities.
Grabowski had already been convicted of sexual offences and had served time in prison for sexual assaults committed against two different girls at the time of the incident.
Castration was a voluntary procedure that he underwent in 1976 when he was incarcerated. For the purpose of reversing the effects of the chemical castration, he started hormone therapy two years later. This allowed him to have a romantic relationship with his fiancee.
While Grabowski quickly admitted to being responsible for Anna’s death, he denied having sexually molested the young woman. Grabowski took his allegations even further and asserted that Anna had attempted to extort and seduce him while he was on trial there.
In point of fact, Grabowski placed the blame for his heinous crime on the victim of his murder. He asserted that the only reason he carried out the murder of the little girl was because she intended to blackmail him. Grabowski claims that Anna threatened him and stated that she demanded money. If she did not receive it, she would tell her mother that Grabowski had touched her in an inappropriate manner.
The explanation that Grabowski provided was not accepted by the court.
Marianne, Anna’s mother, was left in a condition of powerlessness, resentment, and fury as a result of his weird and terrible story, which drove her mad. Marianne made the decision to take matters into her own hands on March 6, 1981, which was the third day of the trial.
Through some means, she was able to sneak a firearm into the courtroom, so evading the security checks and all of the guards. She quickly removed the loaded gun from her handbag, aimed it at the person who had murdered her daughter, and then discharged the full magazine. This occurred not long after she entered the hall. Seven of the eight shots hit their target, and Grabowski fell to the ground soon after them. On the spot, he passed away.
The Beretta M1934 that Anna’s mother was carrying was dropped by her mother immediately after the shooting. It was then when her voice filled the room:
He was responsible for the death of my daughter… Despite my desire to shoot him in the face, I ended up shooting him in the back instead… I really hope he’s over.”
Marianne allegedly referred to Grabowski as a “pig” after she fired fire, as stated by two law enforcement officers who were present at the scene.
It was in the courtroom that she was taken into custody by the police, and she was initially accused with murder. During the trial that Marianne was going through in 1982, she stated that she had shot Grabowski in a dream state after she had a vision of her daughter in court.
On the other hand, the testimony of specialists who testified during the trial indicated that Marianne’s behaviour necessitated specialised training with the firearm, which suggests that she had planned and arranged everything in advance of the shooting.
In addition, the mother was evaluated by the medical professionals, and they requested that she provide a sample of her handwriting. “I did it for you, Anna,” Marianne replied after receiving Anna’s response. In addition, the sample was adorned with seven hearts, which many people understood as a memorial to each year that Anna had lived.
Marianne was going to be faced with a sentence of life in prison if she was found guilty.
The mother’s act of vigilantism garnered a significant amount of attention from the media, not just in Germany but also in other countries around the world. Marianne was given the nickname “Revenge mom,” and many people believed that she ought to be found not guilty throughout the trial.
Despite the fact that she carried out vigilante justice, the heartbroken mother who avenged the loss of her cherished daughter received a great deal of encouragement and understanding from a large number of people.
When Marianne was first introduced to the public, the media depicted her as a sacred figure. However, journalists began to investigate her history after that. Marianne’s decision to place her first two children for adoption was brought to the attention of the media. One of the aspects that began to taint the picture of a loving and self-sacrificing mother was the fact that she spent a lot of time in the pub where she worked. This was only one of the details.
The convictions of premeditated manslaughter and unlawful possession of a handgun were handed down to Marianne in the year 1983. Although she was given a sentence of six years in prison, she was released after serving only three years.
In a study conducted by the Allensbach Institute, it was found that the people were divided about her punishment. There were around 28 percent of people who thought that her sentence of six years was suitable, 27 percent of people who thought that it was too heavy, and 25 percent of people who thought that it was too soft.
Following the completion of her sentence, Marianne relocated to Nigeria and wed a German educator once she was released from prison. In 1990, she went through a divorce and relocated to Sicily, which is located in Italy.
Unfortunately, Marianne was finally diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, and so she relocated back to Lubeck, the city that she had called her hometown and motherland.
Many Germans continued to remember her act of vengeance; newspapers continued to write about the episode long into the 1990s. Her deed of vengeance remained to live on in their memories.
A rare interview with her was broadcast on German radio in 1994, thirteen years after her performance.
“If I kill a young girl because I am frightened that I would have to spend the rest of my life in prison, I believe there is a significant difference between the two scenarios. “And then there is also the ‘how,’ so that I step behind the girl and strangle her, which is taken literally from his statement: “I heard something come out of her nose, I was captivated, and then I could not endure the sight of her body any longer,” she said. “I choked her.”
During an interview that took place in 1995 with the Das Erste television channel, Marianne admitted that she had intentionally shot Grabowski after giving it a lot of thought and in order to stop him from spreading any more lies about Anna.
In Lubeck, on September 17, 1996, Marianne passed away when she was a patient at a hospital. Despite her desire to pass away in her prior residence in Sicily, she was never able to do so.
After some time had passed, Marianne was laid to rest at a cemetery near Lubeck, next to her cherished daughter.
A case of vigilante justice and the outcome of Marianne’s case are still being discussed. For a sexual offender who had already been convicted of child molestation on multiple occasions, a significant portion of the community justified her actions and believed that they were appropriate as a kind of punishment.
On the other hand, there were many who believed that Marianne’s decision to take matters into her own hands was a mistake. As the critics pointed out, she ought to have deferred to the judge in making the decision.