BERLIN (Reuters) – A former officer for Communist East Germany’s Stasi secret police was sentenced to 10 years in prison on Monday for the fatal shooting of a Polish firefighter at a border crossing between East and West Berlin 50 years ago, German media said.
Manfred N, 80, whose last name was not given because of privacy law, was convicted of murder over the March 1974 killing of Czeslaw Kukuczka, a 38-year-old Polish national, several newspapers reported.
The judgment can be appealed. Manfred N, from the eastern city of Leipzig, did not speak during the trial.
Kukuczka had told officials at the Polish embassy in East Berlin that he had an explosive device in his briefcase to force them to allow him to go to the West. The city was divided at the time by the Berlin Wall.
Kukuczka was passing through the Friedrichstrasse border crossing known as the “Palace of Tears” when he was shot in the back from close range in broad daylight.
Instead of being taken to a nearby hospital, Kukuczka was transported to a Stasi prison hospital further away because of terrorism suspicions, and bled to death there.
His family was not informed of the true circumstances of his death and his urn was buried in Poland.
Key to the case was the reconstruction of a shredded document in 2016 that listed Stasi officers who received awards shortly after Kukuczka’s death for preventing what was described as a border provocation, Tagesspiegel newspaper said.
Manfred N’s defence lawyer called for him to be acquitted, saying it could not be conclusively proved he was the shooter or that the killing qualified as murder instead of manslaughter, subject to a statute of limitations, Tagesspiegel reported.
At least 140 people were killed at the Berlin Wall between 1961 and 1989. Few people have been held responsible for those deaths and generally face manslaughter charges, if any.
(Reporting by Miranda Murray, Editing by Timothy Heritage)