San Francisco Chronicle

Guilty verdict in neo-Nazi trial

- By Frank Jordans Frank Jordans is an Associated Press writer.

MUNICH — A German court on Wednesday found the main defendant in a high-profile neo-Nazi trial guilty in the killing of 10 people — most of them migrants — who were gunned down between 2000 and 2007 in a case that shocked Germany and prompted accusation­s of institutio­nal racism in the country’s security agencies.

Judges sentenced Beate Zschaepe to life in prison for murder, membership of a terrorist organizati­on, bomb attacks that injured dozens and several lesser crimes including a string of robberies. Four men were found guilty of supporting the group in various ways and sentenced to prison terms of between 2½ and 10 years.

Presiding judge Manfred Goetzl told a packed Munich courtroom that Zschaepe’s guilt weighed particular­ly heavily, meaning she is likely to serve at least a 15-year sentence. Her lawyers plan to appeal the verdict.

The 43-year-old showed no emotion as Goetzl read out her sentence.

Zschaepe was arrested in 2011, shortly after her two accomplice­s were found dead in an apparent murder-suicide. Together with the men, Uwe Mundlos and Uwe Boehnhardt, she had formed the National Socialist Undergroun­d, a group that pursued an ideology of white racial supremacy by targeting migrants, mostly of Turkish origin.

Goetzl said the trio agreed in late 1998 to kill people “for anti-Semitic or other racist motivation­s” in order to intimidate ethnic minorities and portray the state as impotent.

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