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Alleged 'Reichsbuerger' coup plot conspirators go on trial

CGTN

Property investor Heinrich XIII Prinz Reuss and his lawyers arrive for his trial. /Boris Roessler/Pool via Reuters
Property investor Heinrich XIII Prinz Reuss and his lawyers arrive for his trial. /Boris Roessler/Pool via Reuters

Property investor Heinrich XIII Prinz Reuss and his lawyers arrive for his trial. /Boris Roessler/Pool via Reuters

A would-be prince, a former judge and parliamentarian and retired military officers are among nine alleged conspirators standing trial for a suspected 'Reichsbuerger' plot to overthrow Germany's democracy.

Prosecutors say they were ringleaders in a terrorist plot to topple the German government and install property investor Heinrich XIII Prinz Reuss, scion of a now throneless dynasty, as a caretaker head of state.

Beginning on Tuesday, it's the second case to open against members of a conspiracy involving at least 27 people. It is being held in a maximum-security courtroom on the outskirts of Frankfurt. 

The defendants, sitting behind bullet-proof glass, constitute what prosecutors say would have been the political and military leadership of a plot to storm parliament and detain legislators to initiate their seizure of power.

"They knew their seizure of power would involve killing people," prosecutors wrote.

The defendants have denied charges of terrorism and high treason.

Prosecutors say they are adherents of the 'Reichsbuerger' (Citizens of the Reich) belief system, which holds that today's German state is an illegitimate facade and that they are citizens of a German monarchy which, they maintain, endured after Germany's defeat in World War One despite its formal abolition.

Security services say the conspiracy theory, which has parallels to the QAnon movement that fuelled the January 6, 2021 storming of the U.S. Capitol, has some 21,000 adherents nationwide.

Nine accomplices who prosecutors say would have imposed martial law after a putsch went on trial in Stuttgart last month.

Tuesday's defendants include former army officers Maximilian Eder and Ruediger von Pescatore, and former judge and far-right ex-parliamentarian Birgit Malsack-Winkemann.

Prosecutors say Malsack-Winkemann used her parliamentary privileges to escort several of her co-conspirators around the Reichstag building in Berlin in a scoping exercise to plan the putsch.

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The suspects reject the charges against them. Eder told Stern magazine in an interview given from prison that the parliamentary tour had been intended to find suitable locations to accost lawmakers over what he believed was their involvement in a child molestation ring.

Prosecutors say the conspiracy had $500,000 in funds and had gathered over 100,000 rounds of ammunition.

Alleged 'Reichsbuerger' coup plot conspirators go on trial

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Source(s): Reuters
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