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Hub AI
Wolfgang Grams AI simulator
(@Wolfgang Grams_simulator)
Hub AI
Wolfgang Grams AI simulator
(@Wolfgang Grams_simulator)
Wolfgang Grams
Wolfgang Werner 'Gaks' Grams (6 March 1953 – 27 June 1993) was a member of the Red Army Faction (RAF), a German far-left terrorist organization. Grams went underground in 1984 and subsequently belonged to the command level of the RAF's third generation. During an attempt to arrest him by GSG 9, the counter‑terrorism unit of the Federal Border Guard (Bundesgrenzschutz, BGS), in Bad Kleinen, he was shot and, according to the findings of the Staatsanwaltschaft Schwerin (public prosecutor's office in Schwerin)—reviewed multiple times by the courts—died by suicide. The exact circumstances of his death remain disputed. Within parts of the political left, the view persists that Grams was deliberately killed by officers involved in the operation.
Wolfgang Grams was born in Wiesbaden, West Germany. His father, Werner, had volunteered for service in the Waffen-SS during the Second World War. After 1945, he and his wife Ruth fled from the eastern territories. Wolfgang also had a brother named Rainer.
In his youth, the family lived near the Wiesbaden Army Airfield, and Grams took part in protests against the Vietnam War.
While living in a commune, he was given the nickname "Gaks." After the arrest of Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin, he began visiting Red Army Faction (RAF) prisoners, believing the conditions of solitary confinement to be inhumane.
Grams's name was later found in the notebook of an RAF member who was killed during an arrest attempt. He was held in custody for 153 days and received compensation in 1980 for his wrongful detention. He subsequently met Birgit Hogefeld, a leading member of the Red Army Faction (RAF), and began a relationship with her.
Although Grams had been released and compensated for wrongful detention in 1980, investigators later linked him again to RAF circles, and after he went underground in 1984 the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) issued a wanted‑person card for him in March 1985. On 15 February 1987, the Tagesschau on ARD broadcast a bulletin on Grams and Hogefeld, describing him as 180 centimetres (5 ft 11 in) tall, with blue‑gray eyes and a distinctive dark spot discoloration on his face. He returned home only once, in the autumn of 1990, to meet his parents in the Taunus region.
Numerous documentaries, books, and articles have examined Grams's alleged involvement in several RAF attacks, including the killings of Gerold von Braunmühl (1986), Alfred Herrhausen (1989), and Detlev Karsten Rohwedder (1991). In 2001, DNA evidence linked Grams to the Rohwedder killing.
The operation followed a tip‑off from the undercover informant Klaus Steinmetz, who had infiltrated the Red Army Faction (RAF) and alerted authorities to a planned meeting. Steinmetz, who had lured Hogefeld to Mecklenburg and thereby set the Bad Kleinen operation in motion, was a German V‑Mann (undercover informant) for the Office for the Protection of the Constitution of Rhineland-Palatinate. On 27 June 1993, officers from the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) and the GSG 9 counter‑terrorism unit of the Federal Border Guard (Bundesgrenzschutz, BGS) were deployed to arrest Grams and Hogefeld at the Bad Kleinen railway station. Hogefeld was armed but did not fire her weapon during the arrest. During the attempted arrest, Grams ran up the stairs toward the tracks, pursued by six GSG 9 officers. He turned and fired ten shots at the officers on the platform, who returned fire. Two officers were injured, and GSG 9 officer Michael Newrzella was struck by four bullets and died on the platform. Grams fell backward onto the track after being shot in the abdomen and remained lying there. In the immediate aftermath, he reportedly attempted to take his own life; he was airlifted to the Medizinische Universität zu Lübeck, where he died later that day from a head wound that forensic examiners later determined to be self‑inflicted.
Wolfgang Grams
Wolfgang Werner 'Gaks' Grams (6 March 1953 – 27 June 1993) was a member of the Red Army Faction (RAF), a German far-left terrorist organization. Grams went underground in 1984 and subsequently belonged to the command level of the RAF's third generation. During an attempt to arrest him by GSG 9, the counter‑terrorism unit of the Federal Border Guard (Bundesgrenzschutz, BGS), in Bad Kleinen, he was shot and, according to the findings of the Staatsanwaltschaft Schwerin (public prosecutor's office in Schwerin)—reviewed multiple times by the courts—died by suicide. The exact circumstances of his death remain disputed. Within parts of the political left, the view persists that Grams was deliberately killed by officers involved in the operation.
Wolfgang Grams was born in Wiesbaden, West Germany. His father, Werner, had volunteered for service in the Waffen-SS during the Second World War. After 1945, he and his wife Ruth fled from the eastern territories. Wolfgang also had a brother named Rainer.
In his youth, the family lived near the Wiesbaden Army Airfield, and Grams took part in protests against the Vietnam War.
While living in a commune, he was given the nickname "Gaks." After the arrest of Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin, he began visiting Red Army Faction (RAF) prisoners, believing the conditions of solitary confinement to be inhumane.
Grams's name was later found in the notebook of an RAF member who was killed during an arrest attempt. He was held in custody for 153 days and received compensation in 1980 for his wrongful detention. He subsequently met Birgit Hogefeld, a leading member of the Red Army Faction (RAF), and began a relationship with her.
Although Grams had been released and compensated for wrongful detention in 1980, investigators later linked him again to RAF circles, and after he went underground in 1984 the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) issued a wanted‑person card for him in March 1985. On 15 February 1987, the Tagesschau on ARD broadcast a bulletin on Grams and Hogefeld, describing him as 180 centimetres (5 ft 11 in) tall, with blue‑gray eyes and a distinctive dark spot discoloration on his face. He returned home only once, in the autumn of 1990, to meet his parents in the Taunus region.
Numerous documentaries, books, and articles have examined Grams's alleged involvement in several RAF attacks, including the killings of Gerold von Braunmühl (1986), Alfred Herrhausen (1989), and Detlev Karsten Rohwedder (1991). In 2001, DNA evidence linked Grams to the Rohwedder killing.
The operation followed a tip‑off from the undercover informant Klaus Steinmetz, who had infiltrated the Red Army Faction (RAF) and alerted authorities to a planned meeting. Steinmetz, who had lured Hogefeld to Mecklenburg and thereby set the Bad Kleinen operation in motion, was a German V‑Mann (undercover informant) for the Office for the Protection of the Constitution of Rhineland-Palatinate. On 27 June 1993, officers from the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) and the GSG 9 counter‑terrorism unit of the Federal Border Guard (Bundesgrenzschutz, BGS) were deployed to arrest Grams and Hogefeld at the Bad Kleinen railway station. Hogefeld was armed but did not fire her weapon during the arrest. During the attempted arrest, Grams ran up the stairs toward the tracks, pursued by six GSG 9 officers. He turned and fired ten shots at the officers on the platform, who returned fire. Two officers were injured, and GSG 9 officer Michael Newrzella was struck by four bullets and died on the platform. Grams fell backward onto the track after being shot in the abdomen and remained lying there. In the immediate aftermath, he reportedly attempted to take his own life; he was airlifted to the Medizinische Universität zu Lübeck, where he died later that day from a head wound that forensic examiners later determined to be self‑inflicted.
