The Daily Telegraph

German spared jail over Nazi tank in cellar

- By Justin Huggler in Berlin

A GERMAN pensioner who kept a Second World War Nazi tank in his basement for more than 30 years was yesterday given a 14-month suspended jail sentence and fined €50,000 (£43,000).

The 84-year-old, named only as Klaus-dieter F under German privacy laws, admitted breaking the country’s War Weapons Control Act in a plea bargain to avoid being sent to prison.

He also agreed to pay a further €200,000 (£170,000) to charity under the terms of the deal.

As well as a 1943 Panther tank, he also kept an 88mm anti-aircraft gun, a torpedo, a mortar, 70 assault rifles and over 2,000 rounds of ammunition in the basement of his villa in Heikendorf, a wealthy suburb of Kiel in northern Germany.

Prosecutor­s stumbled on the trove of weapons when they searched his home looking for stolen Nazi artworks after a tip-off in 2015.

Lawyers for Klaus-dieter F initially argued the weapons were a collection of memorabili­a and were all deactivate­d and could no longer be used.

But the judge rejected that line of reasoning and urged the defence and prosecutio­n to agree to a plea bargain to spare the 84-year-old jail time.

While Klaus-dieter F is understood to be wealthy, he will have some help raising funds to pay the fine and charitable donations after the judge rejected calls to confiscate the weapons. Instead, he ordered Klaus-dieter F to sell the tank and anti-aircraft gun to a museum or approved collector within two years.

A museum in Seattle is understood to be in negotiatio­ns to buy the tank, while a private collector in Germany has expressed interest in the anti-aircraft gun.

Prosecutor­s alleged they also found extensive Nazi memorabili­a in the basement, including swastikas, SS runes and mannequins in Nazi uniform, but these claims were not examined during the trial and Klaus-dieter F’s political views were not discussed.

Under German law it is illegal to display Nazi symbols or artefacts in public, but they can be kept for scholarly or museum purposes.

The German army had to be called in to help remove the tank and anti-aircraft gun from the cellar when they were first discovered.

The Panther, considered one of the most effective tanks of the Second World War, weighed 44 tons.

At the time of the discovery, Alexander Orth, the local mayor, told German media he was not surprised.

“He was chugging around in that thing during the snow disaster in 1978,” he said.

‘I’m not surprised – he was chugging around in that thing during the snow disaster in 1978’

 ??  ?? Soldiers remove the Second World War Panther tank from a pensioner’s home in Kiel, northern Germany. He admitted breaking the country’s War Weapons Control Act
Soldiers remove the Second World War Panther tank from a pensioner’s home in Kiel, northern Germany. He admitted breaking the country’s War Weapons Control Act

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