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{{Short description|1988 event in West Germany}}
{{Use British English|date=June 2022}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2022}}
{{Infobox civilian attack
{{Infobox civilian attack
| title = Gladbeck hostage crisis
| title = Gladbeck hostage crisis
| image =
| image = {{Photomontage|position=center
| photo1a = Schwechater Straße 38 Deutsche Bank.jpg
| caption =
| photo2a = Gedenkstein Huckelriede.jpg
| photo2b = Gedenkskulptur.jpg
| size = 300
| spacing = 0
| color =
| border = 0
}}
| caption = From top down, left to right: {{hlist|Former [[Deutsche Bank]] branch in [[Gladbeck|Gladbeck-Rentfort]]|Commemorative plaque at the Huckelriede bus stop in [[Bremen]]|Memorial for Silke Bischoff in [[Aegidienberg]]}}
| location = Various places in [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], [[Lower Saxony]] and [[Bremen (state)|Bremen]], [[West Germany]]; <br> [[Oldenzaal]], [[Netherlands]]
| location = Various places in [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], [[Lower Saxony]] and [[Bremen (state)|Bremen]], [[West Germany]]; <br> [[Oldenzaal]], [[Netherlands]]
| coordinates =
| coordinates =
Line 19: Line 30:
* [[9mm]] [[SIG Sauer P220#Variants|SIG Sauer P225]] (Löblich)
* [[9mm]] [[SIG Sauer P220#Variants|SIG Sauer P225]] (Löblich)
}}
}}
{{ Location map+
|FRG and West Berlin
|width=300
|float=right
|caption=Important locations on the hostage-takers' flight:<ref>{{cite news |last1=Altrogge |first1=Gudrun |last2=Dahlkamp |first2=Jürgen |last3=Kölling |first3=Nadja |last4=Schrep |first4=Bruno |title=Mach es weg, mach es weg |url=http://magazin.spiegel.de/EpubDelivery/spiegel/pdf/58852947 |access-date=2 December 2021 |work=[[Der Spiegel]] |issue=33 |date=2008 |pages=36–42 |language=de}}</ref>
# 16 August, 07:55 – Bank robbery. <br> 16 August, 21:37 – Rösner and Degowski leave the bank with two hostages. They are later joined by Löblich.
# 17 August, 19:11 – Bus hijacking.
# 17 August, 23:07 – Degowski shoots Emanuele De Giorgi in the head.
# 18 August, 06:32 – Switch to getaway car with Silke Bischoff and Ines Voitle as hostages.
# 18 August, 10:53 – Stop in the city centre.
# 18 August, 13:40 – The police ends the hostage-taking. Silke Bischoff is fatally shot.
|places={{Location map~
|FRG and West Berlin
|label=[[Gladbeck]] <small>(1)</small>
|position=right
|long=6.988
|lat=51.572
|region=DE
}}
{{Location map~
|FRG and West Berlin
|label=<small>(2)</small> [[Bremen]]
|position=left
|long=8.822
|lat=53.080
|region=DE
}}
{{Location map~
|FRG and West Berlin
|label=[[Bundesautobahn 1|{{nowrap|A1 Grundbergsee}} rest area]] <small>(3)</small>
|position=right
|long=9.177
|lat=53.088
|region=DE
}}
{{Location map~
|FRG and West Berlin
|label={{nowrap|[[Oldenzaal]] <small>(4)</small>}}
|position=right
|long=6.999
|lat=52.301
|region=NL
}}
{{Location map~
|FRG and West Berlin
|label=[[Cologne]] <small>(5)</small>
|position=right
|long=6.958
|lat=50.939
|region=DE
}}
{{Location map~
|FRG and West Berlin
|label=[[Bundesautobahn 3|A3]] near [[Bad Honnef]] <small>(6)</small>
|position=bottom
|long=7.322
|lat=50.658
|region=DE
}}
}}
The '''Gladbeck hostage crisis''' (known in Germany as the '''Gladbeck hostage drama'''<ref name="BBC" />) was a [[hostage-taking]] crisis that happened in August 1988 after an armed bank raid in [[Gladbeck]], [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], [[West Germany]]. Two men with prior criminal records, Dieter Degowski and Hans-Jürgen Rösner, went on the run for two days through Germany and the Netherlands.<ref name="BBC">{{cite news |last=Mansel |first=Tim |date=20 August 2018 |title=Gladbeck: The deadly hostage drama where the media crossed a line |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-45226482 |work=[[BBC]] |access-date=20 August 2018}}</ref>


[[File:Gladbeck hostage crisis route.svg|thumb|350px|{{Collapsible list
The whole episode quickly became a [[media circus]] in Germany and the Netherlands.<ref name="BBC" /><ref name="DW-17025034">{{Cite web |url=https://www.dw.com/en/german-hostage-drama-the-day-the-press-became-the-story/a-17025034 |title=German hostage drama: The day the press became the story |last=Marek |first=Michael |last2=Todeskino |first2=Marie |date=16 Aug 2018 |website=[[Deutsche Welle]] |access-date=20 August 2018}}</ref> On 18 August 1988 the hostage situation was put to an end in a police operation on the [[Bundesautobahn 3|A3 motorway]]. Three people were killed during this crisis – two teenage hostages and a policeman involved in a vehicle crash.
|title=Route taken by the hostage-takers<ref>{{cite news |last1=Altrogge |first1=Gudrun |last2=Dahlkamp |first2=Jürgen |last3=Kölling |first3=Nadja |last4=Schrep |first4=Bruno |title=Mach es weg, mach es weg |url=http://magazin.spiegel.de/EpubDelivery/spiegel/pdf/58852947 |access-date=2 December 2021 |work=[[Der Spiegel]] |issue=33 |date=2008 |pages=36–42 |language=de}}</ref>
|1={{Ordered list
|16 August, 07:55 – Bank robbery in Gladbeck-Rentfort. <br> 16 August, 21:37 – Rösner and Degowski leave the bank with two hostages and are later joined by Löblich.
|17 August, 19:11 – Bus hijacking in Bremen.
|17 August, 23:07 – Degowski shoots Emanuele De Giorgi in the head.
|18 August, 06:32 – Switch to getaway car with Silke Bischoff and Ines Voitle as hostages.
|18 August, 10:53 – Stop in the city centre of Cologne.
|18 August, 13:40 – The police ends the hostage-taking. Silke Bischoff is fatally shot.}}
}}]]

The '''Gladbeck hostage crisis''' or '''Gladbeck hostage drama''' was a [[bank robbery]] and [[hostage-taking]] that took place in [[West Germany]] from 16 to 18 August 1988. Two men with prior criminal records – Hans-Jürgen Rösner and Dieter Degowski – robbed a branch of the [[Deutsche Bank]] in [[Gladbeck]], [[North Rhine-Westphalia]], taking two employees as hostages.<ref name="BBC">{{cite news |last=Mansel |first=Tim |date=20 August 2018 |title=Gladbeck: The deadly hostage drama where the media crossed a line |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-45226482 |work=[[BBC]] |access-date=20 August 2018}}</ref> During their flight, they were joined by Rösner's girlfriend Marion Löblich, with whom they hijacked a [[Public transport bus service|public transport bus]] in [[Bremen]].<ref name="BBC"/> With twenty-seven hostages aboard, they drove towards the [[Netherlands]], where all but two hostages were released, and the bus was exchanged for a [[getaway car]].<ref name="BBC"/> The hostage-taking was finally ended when the police rammed the getaway car on the [[Bundesautobahn 3|A3 motorway]] near [[Bad Honnef]], North Rhine-Westphalia.<ref name="BBC"/>

During the hostage crisis, a 15-year-old boy and an 18-year-old woman were killed.<ref name="Weser-Kurier">{{cite web |last1=Scheil |first1=Detlev |title=Bewegende und würdevolle Gedenkstunde |url=https://www.weser-kurier.de/bremen/stadtteil-neustadt/bewegende-und-wuerdevolle-gedenkstunde-doc7e4g8t1bnh1tm8u4lm6 |website=[[Weser-Kurier]] |access-date=19 June 2022 |language=de |date=30 March 2019}}</ref> A third victim, a 31-year-old police officer, died in a [[Traffic collision|traffic accident]] while chasing the hostage-takers.<ref name="Weser-Kurier"/> At the time, the unfolding of events was extensively covered by West German media, which quickly spiraled into a [[media circus]].<ref name="DW-17025034">{{Cite web |url=https://www.dw.com/en/german-hostage-drama-the-day-the-press-became-the-story/a-17025034 |title=German hostage drama: The day the press became the story |last1=Marek |first1=Michael |last2=Todeskino |first2=Marie |date=16 Aug 2018 |website=[[Deutsche Welle]] |access-date=20 August 2018}}</ref><ref name="Guardian2018">{{cite web |last1=Connolly |first1=Kate |title=German bank raid and hostage-grab of 80s plays out in TV drama |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/09/german-bank-raid-and-hostage-grab-of-80s-plays-out-in-tv-drama |website=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=19 June 2022 |language=en |date=9 March 2018}}</ref> In the aftermath of the hostage crisis, journalists were criticised for conducting [[Interview (journalism)|interviews]] with the hostage-takers, asking them to pose for photographs, and aiding them by giving them, among other things, coffee and road directions.<ref name="Guardian2018"/> This resulted in the German Press Council banning any future interviews with hostage-takers during hostage situations.<ref name="BBC"/>

== Perpetrators ==
=== Hans-Jürgen Rösner ===
Hans-Jürgen "Hanusch" Rösner was born on 17 February 1957 in [[Gladbeck]].<ref name="RösnerPorträt">{{cite web |title=Hans-Jürgen Rösner im Porträt |url=https://gladbeck.rnd.de/hans-juergen-roesner-im-portrait/ |website=[[RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland|RND Gladbeck]] |access-date=18 June 2022 |language=de-DE}}</ref> He grew up in a family with three older sisters and one younger sister.<ref name="RösnerPorträt"/> His father, who was a [[World War II]] veteran, was often violent and [[Domestic violence|physically abused]] him throughout his childhood.<ref name="RösnerPorträt"/><ref name="Spiegel1989">{{cite news |last1=Bednarz |first1=Dieter |last2=Schrep |first2=Bruno |title="Tot sein ist schöner als wie ohne Geld" |url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/tot-sein-ist-schoener-als-wie-ohne-geld-a-ac7f787e-0002-0001-0000-000013495360?context=issue |work=[[Der Spiegel]] |access-date=19 June 2022 |language=de |date=25 June 1989 |issue=26}}</ref> At the age of 8 or 9, an acquaintance of his father's reportedly taught him to [[shoplift]].<ref name="RösnerPorträt"/> His first [[conviction]] for theft was at the age of 14.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/>

By his late 20s, Rösner had already committed numerous thefts and burglaries, and had spent a total of eleven years in prison.<ref>{{cite web |title=L'Allemagne va juger des preneurs |url=https://www.lesoir.be/art/l-allemagne-va-juger-des-preneurs_t-19890801-Z01VVQ.html |website=[[Le Soir]] |access-date=19 June 2022 |language=fr |date=1 August 1989 |url-access=subscription}}</ref> In August 1986, he disappeared while on [[parole]] and went into hiding at his sister's house.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/><ref name="Spiegel1989b">{{cite news |last1=Friedrichsen |first1=Gisela |title=". . . kamen Sie gleich zur Sache, Herr Rösner?" |url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/kamen-sie-gleich-zur-sache-herr-roesner-a-6d0eee98-0002-0001-0000-000013493737?context=issue |access-date=19 June 2022 |work=[[Der Spiegel]] |issue=33 |date=13 August 1989 |language=de}}</ref> One year later, he moved in with his girlfriend, Marion Löblich, and her teenaged daughter Nicole, in an apartment in the neighborhood of Rentfort-Nord.<ref name="RösnerPorträt"/><ref name="Spiegel1989"/> The police, having been tipped by Rösner's ex-wife Ursula regarding his whereabouts, planned to arrest him on 16 August 1988 – the day of the bank robbery and hostage-taking.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/>

=== Dieter Degowski ===
Dieter Degowski was born on 4 June 1956 in Gladbeck; he was the fifth child in a family of six children.<ref name="DegowskiPorträt">{{cite web |title=Dieter Degowski im Porträt |url=https://gladbeck.rnd.de/dieter-degowski-im-portrait/ |website=[[RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland|RND Gladbeck]] |access-date=18 June 2022 |language=de-DE}}</ref> Like Rösner, he experienced domestic abuse as a child, causing him to develop a violent and anti-social character.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/> The two met while attending a [[primary school]] for [[special education]].<ref name="DegowskiPorträt"/> In his early teens, he regularly committed minor crimes, such as shoplifting, and was first arrested at the age of 15 for stealing [[sedative drugs]].<ref name="DegowskiPorträt"/> He later started stealing cars, and developed an alcohol and [[Secobarbital/brallobarbital/hydroxyzine|Vesparax]] addiction.<ref name="DegowskiPorträt"/>

In 1983, Rösner and Degowski crossed paths again when they shared a cell in [[Werl Prison]] for eight months.<ref name="DegowskiPorträt"/> Shortly before the bank robbery in August 1988, Degowski agreed to be Rösner's accomplice on the premise that they would use the money to establish their own [[Vehicle recycling|car recycling]] business near [[Münster]].<ref name="DegowskiPorträt"/> Degowski's [[Intelligence quotient|IQ]] was assessed at 79.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Langenau |first1=Lars |title=Freilassung von Dieter Degowski: Sündenfall des deutschen Journalismus |url=https://www.sueddeutsche.de/panorama/dieter-degowski-ein-deutsches-trauma-1.3871732-2 |website=[[Süddeutsche Zeitung]] |access-date=18 June 2022 |language=de |date=17 February 2018}}</ref>

=== Marion Löblich ===
Marion Irma Löblich ({{nee|Müller}}) was born on 14 April 1954 in [[Bremen]]; she was the second of eight children.<ref name="LöblichPorträt">{{cite web |title=Marion Löblich im Porträt |url=https://gladbeck.rnd.de/marion-loeblich-im-portrait/ |website=[[RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland|RND Gladbeck]] |access-date=18 June 2022 |language=de-DE}}</ref> During her childhood, her parents often coped with financial problems.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/> In her late teens, she became pregnant with her first child and married the father.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/><ref name="LöblichPorträt"/> Some time after the birth of her daughter Leila, who is [[Intellectual disability|intellectually disabled]], she caught her husband [[Infidelity|cheating]] with her best friend.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/><ref name="LöblichPorträt"/> She applied for a [[divorce]] in 1975, while pregnant with her second daughter, Nicole.<ref name="LöblichPorträt"/>

One year later, she married her second husband in [[Duisburg]]; they moved to Gladbeck and opened a [[Bar (establishment)|bar]].<ref name="Spiegel1989"/><ref name="LöblichPorträt"/> There, she met Ralf Löblich and divorced her husband in 1978 to marry a third time.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/><ref name="LöblichPorträt"/> In 1980, she gave birth to a son, named Pierre.<ref name="LöblichPorträt"/> The couple worked as [[taxi]] drivers for some time, but unsatisfied with her marriage, Löblich eventually left her husband to start a relationship with Hans-Jürgen Rösner.<ref name="Spiegel1989"/>


==Timeline==
==Timeline==
Line 87: Line 66:
In the early morning two armed and hooded offenders broke into a branch of the [[Deutsche Bank]] in the district of Rentfort-Nord in Gladbeck before opening hours.<ref name="BBC" />
In the early morning two armed and hooded offenders broke into a branch of the [[Deutsche Bank]] in the district of Rentfort-Nord in Gladbeck before opening hours.<ref name="BBC" />


At 8:04 am an emergency call was made by a witness to the police. A parked police car was seen by the offenders as they left the branch. They went back into the bank and took two clerks hostage, demanding a car and [[ransom]] money, firing their guns into the air several times.<ref name="BBC" />
At 8:04 am, an emergency call was made to the police by a witness. A parked police car was seen by the offenders as they left the branch. They went back into the bank and took two clerks hostage, demanding a car and [[ransom]] money, firing their guns into the air several times.<ref name="BBC" />


A radio station was the first to conduct an interview with them as the hostage crisis was happening. After several hours of negotiations, the abductors were given 300,000 [[Deutsche Mark|DM]] and a white [[Audi 100]] as a getaway car. At 9:45pm the getaway started. The robbers took two bank employees with them as hostages. Marion Löblich, the girlfriend of Hans-Jürgen Rösner (who was one of the robbers), boarded the car in Gladbeck.
A radio station was the first to conduct an interview with them as the hostage crisis was happening. After several hours of negotiations, the abductors were given 300,000 [[Deutsche Mark|DM]] and a white [[Audi 100]] as a getaway car. At 9:45 pm, the getaway started. The robbers took two bank employees with them as hostages. Marion Löblich, the girlfriend of Hans-Jürgen Rösner (who was one of the robbers), boarded the car in Gladbeck.

{{multiple image
| align = right
| direction = vertical
| width = 250
| image1 = HHA 6416-III.JPG
| image2 = O305 Bremer Straßenbahn AG Buslinie 53 (1988).svg
| caption2 = Above: a [[Mercedes-Benz O305]] similar to the one that was hijacked. Below: [[Livery#Modern usage|livery]] of the hijacked [[BSAG]] bus.
}}


===17 August===
===17 August===
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After the release of five hostages, the bus was driven to the autobahn service area of [[Grundbergsee]]. The two bank clerks were released there.
After the release of five hostages, the bus was driven to the autobahn service area of [[Grundbergsee]]. The two bank clerks were released there.


Two police officers arrested Löblich, who was using the toilet. Demanding an exchange, Degowski and Rösner threatened to kill a hostage every five minutes. After the expiration of the ultimatum they shot a 14-year-old Italian boy, Emanuele De Giorgi, in the head; he was said to be protecting his sister.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://apnews.com/f653843d2030fa14c2342bffffeb1634 |title=Families of Slain Hostages File Criminal Charges against Police |date=Aug 22, 1988 |work=AP News |access-date=2018-08-20 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>[https://newstopaktuell.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/tatiana-und-ihr-bruder-emanuele.jpg?w=450 Image of Emanuele De Giorgi and his sister Tatiana]</ref> Löblich was about to be released by the police on demand of the abductors but arrived too late because of a broken handcuff key and poor police communication. An ambulance arrived 20 minutes later, but the shot teenager died two hours later in hospital.
Two police officers arrested Löblich, who was using the toilet. Demanding an exchange, Degowski and Rösner threatened to kill a hostage every five minutes. After the expiration of the ultimatum they shot a 15-year-old Italian boy, Emanuele De Giorgi, in the head; he was said to be protecting his sister.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://apnews.com/f653843d2030fa14c2342bffffeb1634 |title=Families of Slain Hostages File Criminal Charges against Police |date=Aug 22, 1988 |work=AP News |access-date=2018-08-20 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>[https://newstopaktuell.files.wordpress.com/2012/10/tatiana-und-ihr-bruder-emanuele.jpg?w=450 Image of Emanuele De Giorgi and his sister Tatiana]</ref> Löblich was about to be released by the police on demand of the abductors but arrived too late because of a broken handcuff key and poor police communication. An ambulance arrived 20 minutes later, but the shot teenager died two hours later in hospital.


After this incident the bus was driven to the [[Netherlands]]. During the chase a police car collided with a truck, leaving one police officer dead and another injured.
After this incident the bus was driven towards [[Oldenzaal]] in [[Netherlands|the Netherlands]]. During the chase a police car collided with a truck, leaving one police officer dead and another injured.

[[File:Silke Bischoff.jpg|175px|thumb|Silke Bischoff, one of the three victims]]


===18 August===
===18 August===
At 2:30am on 18 August 1988, the bus entered the Netherlands. At 5:15am two women and three children were released, after the [[Dutch police]] refused to negotiate as long as children were being held hostage. At 6:30am Rösner and Degowski got a [[BMW 7 Series (E32)|BMW 735i]]. The getaway car had been prepared by the police so that the engine could be stopped by remote control.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1988/08/19/world/hostage-dies-as-german-drama-ends.html|title=Hostage Dies as German Drama Ends|access-date=2018-08-21|language=en}}</ref> While attempting to escape, Löblich and the bus driver were injured.
At 2:30 am on 18 August 1988, the bus crossed the border into the Netherlands. At 5:15 am two women and three children were released, after the [[Dutch police]] refused to negotiate as long as children were being held hostage. At 6:30&nbsp;am Rösner and Degowski got a [[BMW 7 Series (E32)|BMW 735i]]. The getaway car had been prepared by the police so that the engine could be stopped by remote control.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1988/08/19/world/hostage-dies-as-german-drama-ends.html|title=Hostage Dies as German Drama Ends|work=The New York Times |date=19 August 1988 |access-date=2018-08-21|language=en}}</ref> While attempting to escape, Löblich and the bus driver were injured.


During a stop in [[Wuppertal]] the abductors went shopping in a pharmacy.
During a stop in [[Wuppertal]] the abductors went shopping in a pharmacy.


After stopping in a pedestrian area in [[Cologne]] at 10:30am, the car was surrounded by media and shoppers. Some reporters offered to guide the abductors on their way or to hand them pictures of police officers to prevent trickery if hostages were exchanged. A reporter - Udo Röbel - guided the abductors to a nearby rest area on the autobahn and accompanied them for several kilometres.<ref name="BBC" />
After stopping in a pedestrian area in [[Cologne]] at 10:30 am, the car was surrounded by media and shoppers. Some reporters offered to guide the abductors on their way or to hand them pictures of police officers to prevent trickery if hostages were exchanged. A reporter, Udo Röbel, guided the abductors to a nearby rest area on the autobahn and accompanied them for several kilometres.<ref name="BBC" />


On the [[Bundesautobahn 3|A3]] close to [[Bad Honnef]], a few kilometres before the state border between [[North Rhine-Westphalia]] and [[Rhineland-Palatinate]], a police car rammed the getaway car at 1:40pm and rendered it immobile, triggering a gunfight. One of the hostages was able to exit the car. However, Silke Bischoff, 18, was fatally shot in the heart and died. After that the abductors were arrested.<ref name="BBC" />
On the [[Bundesautobahn 3|A3]] close to [[Bad Honnef]], a few kilometres before the state border between [[North Rhine-Westphalia]] and [[Rhineland-Palatinate]], a police car rammed the getaway car at 1:40 pm and rendered it immobile, triggering a gunfight. One of the hostages was able to exit the car. However, Silke Bischoff, 18, was fatally shot in the heart and died. After that the abductors were arrested.<ref name="BBC" />

The remote control to stop the car engine was not used since the police officers had forgotten to take it with them. Across the state border, a special task force ([[GSG9]]) was in position waiting to take action.


==Aftermath==
==Aftermath==
On 22 March, 1991 Rösner and Degowski were pronounced guilty by the regional superior court of [[Essen]] and received life sentences. Löblich was sentenced to nine years. In 2002 the Higher Court in [[Hamm]] ascertained "guilt of a very serious nature" and Degowski's sentence was increased to 24 years. In 2004 the same Higher Court refused an application for parole and a request by Rösner to shorten his sentence. The court also declared a state of "[[preventive detention]]" ("Sicherungsverwahrung") and therefore Rösner is unlikely to be freed after the end of his sentence.
On 22 March, 1991 Rösner and Degowski were pronounced guilty by the regional superior court of [[Essen]] and received life sentences. Löblich was sentenced to nine years. In 2002 the Higher Court in [[Hamm, North Rhine-Westphalia|Hamm]] ascertained "guilt of a very serious nature" and Degowski's sentence was increased to 24 years. In 2004 the same Higher Court refused an application for parole and a request by Rösner to shorten his sentence. The court also declared a state of "[[preventive detention]]" ("Sicherungsverwahrung") and therefore Rösner is unlikely to be freed after the end of his sentence.


On 20 November 1988, the Minister of the Interior of Bremen Bernd Meyer resigned over mistakes by the police.
On 20 November 1988, the Minister of the Interior of Bremen Bernd Meyer resigned over mistakes by the police.
Line 121: Line 109:


===Media conduct===
===Media conduct===
This was the first incident in Germany with direct interference by representatives of the media. The media were severely criticised for their handling of this situation and for conducting interviews with hostages (one of the journalists acting this way was [[Frank Plasberg]]).<ref name="DW-42884351">{{Cite web |url=https://www.dw.com/en/the-hostage-crisis-that-shook-germanys-rules-of-reporting-gladbeck/a-42884351 |title=The hostage crisis that shook Germany's rules of reporting: Gladbeck |last=Marek |first=Michael |last2=Todeskino |first2=Marie |date=8 March 2018 |website=[[Deutsche Welle]] |access-date=20 August 2018 |last3=Grenier |first3=Elizabeth}}</ref> As a result, the German Press Council ([[Deutscher Presserat]]) banned any future interviews with hostage-takers during hostage situations. <ref name="DW-17025034" /><ref name="DW-42884351" /> The head of Germany's largest journalists' union (DJV), Michael Konken, has referred to the incident as "the darkest hour of German journalism since the end of WWII".<ref name="DW-17025034" />
This was the first incident in Germany with direct interference by representatives of the media. The media were severely criticised for their handling of this situation and for conducting interviews with hostages (one of the journalists acting this way was [[Frank Plasberg]]).<ref name="DW-42884351">{{Cite web |url=https://www.dw.com/en/the-hostage-crisis-that-shook-germanys-rules-of-reporting-gladbeck/a-42884351 |title=The hostage crisis that shook Germany's rules of reporting: Gladbeck |last1=Marek |first1=Michael |last2=Todeskino |first2=Marie |date=8 March 2018 |website=[[Deutsche Welle]] |access-date=20 August 2018 |last3=Grenier |first3=Elizabeth}}</ref> As a result, the German Press Council ([[Deutscher Presserat]]) banned any future interviews with hostage-takers during hostage situations. <ref name="DW-17025034" /><ref name="DW-42884351" /> The head of Germany's largest journalists' union (DJV), Michael Konken, has referred to the incident as "the darkest hour of German journalism since the end of WWII".<ref name="DW-17025034" />


==Media==
==Media==
[[File:2019-01-31-Sascha Alexander Gersak; Alexander Scheer-DFP 2019-4673.jpg|thumb|250px|Sascha Alexander Geršak and [[Alexander Scheer]], who portray Rösner and Degowski in the two-part dramatisation ''54 Hours'']]
A two-part dramatization of the incident, titled ''Gladbeck'', was broadcast by [[ARD (broadcaster)|ARD]] in March 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/09/german-bank-raid-and-hostage-grab-of-80s-plays-out-in-tv-drama|title=German bank raid and hostage-grab of 80s plays out in TV drama|last=Connolly|first=Kate|date=2018-03-09|website=the Guardian|language=en|access-date=2018-08-21}}</ref> [[Casefile]] also covered the case in March 2021.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-04-10 |title=Case 171: The Gladbeck Hostage Crisis |url=https://casefilepodcast.com/case-171-the-gladbeck-hostage-crisis/ |access-date=2022-05-05 |website=Casefile: True Crime Podcast |language=en-US}}</ref>
A two-part dramatisation of the events, titled ''{{ill|54 Hours|de|Gladbeck (Film)}}'' ({{Lang-de|Gladbeck}}), was broadcast by [[ARD (broadcaster)|ARD]] in March 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/09/german-bank-raid-and-hostage-grab-of-80s-plays-out-in-tv-drama|title=German bank raid and hostage-grab of 80s plays out in TV drama|last=Connolly|first=Kate|date=2018-03-09|website=the Guardian|language=en|access-date=2018-08-21}}</ref> The Australian crime podcast ''[[Casefile]]'' also covered the case in March 2021.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-04-10 |title=Case 171: The Gladbeck Hostage Crisis |url=https://casefilepodcast.com/case-171-the-gladbeck-hostage-crisis/ |access-date=2022-05-05 |website=Casefile: True Crime Podcast |language=en-US}}</ref>

A documentary titled ''Gladbeck: The Hostage Crisis'' was released in 2022 on Netflix, documenting the events throughout the entire 54 hours using raw footage, without commentary.

== See also ==
* [[Norrmalmstorg robbery|1973 Stockholm hostage crisis]]
* [[1975 Dutch train hostage crisis|1975 Wijster train hijacking]]
* [[1977 Dutch train hijacking|1977 De Punt train hijacking]]
* [[1988 Ordzhonikidze bus hijacking]]


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:1988 in West Germany]]
[[Category:1988 in West Germany]]
[[Category:Hostage taking in Germany]]
[[Category:Crime in North Rhine-Westphalia]]
[[Category:Deaths by firearm in Germany|*]]
[[Category:1988 crimes in Germany]]
[[Category:1988 crimes in Germany]]
[[Category:1988 crimes in the Netherlands]]
[[Category:1980s in North Rhine-Westphalia]]
[[Category:1980s in North Rhine-Westphalia]]
[[Category:1980s in Cologne]]
[[Category:August 1988 events in Europe]]
[[Category:August 1988 events in Europe]]
[[Category:Bank robberies]]
[[Category:Crime in North Rhine-Westphalia]]
[[Category:Crime in Lower Saxony]]
[[Category:Crime in Cologne]]
[[Category:Deaths by firearm in Germany]]
[[Category:Hijackings in Europe]]
[[Category:History of Bremen (city)]]
[[Category:History of Overijssel]]
[[Category:Hostage taking in Germany]]
[[Category:Hostage taking in the Netherlands]]
[[Category:Recklinghausen (district)]]
[[Category:Oldenzaal]]
[[Category:Bad Honnef]]
[[Category:Television controversies in Germany]]
[[Category:Hijackings in 1988]]

Latest revision as of 01:51, 1 May 2024

Gladbeck hostage crisis
From top down, left to right:
StandortVarious places in North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony and Bremen, West Germany;
Oldenzaal, Netherlands
Date16–18 August 1988 (1988-08-16 – 1988-08-18)
Attack type
Bank robbery, hostage-taking
Weapons
Deaths3
InjuredAt least 7 (including the three perpetrators)
Perpetrators
  • Hans-Jürgen Rösner
  • Dieter Degowski
  • Marion Löblich
Route taken by the hostage-takers[1]
    1. 16 August, 07:55 – Bank robbery in Gladbeck-Rentfort.
      16 August, 21:37 – Rösner and Degowski leave the bank with two hostages and are later joined by Löblich.
    2. 17 August, 19:11 – Bus hijacking in Bremen.
    3. 17 August, 23:07 – Degowski shoots Emanuele De Giorgi in the head.
    4. 18 August, 06:32 – Switch to getaway car with Silke Bischoff and Ines Voitle as hostages.
    5. 18 August, 10:53 – Stop in the city centre of Cologne.
    6. 18 August, 13:40 – The police ends the hostage-taking. Silke Bischoff is fatally shot.

The Gladbeck hostage crisis or Gladbeck hostage drama was a bank robbery and hostage-taking that took place in West Germany from 16 to 18 August 1988. Two men with prior criminal records – Hans-Jürgen Rösner and Dieter Degowski – robbed a branch of the Deutsche Bank in Gladbeck, North Rhine-Westphalia, taking two employees as hostages.[2] During their flight, they were joined by Rösner's girlfriend Marion Löblich, with whom they hijacked a public transport bus in Bremen.[2] With twenty-seven hostages aboard, they drove towards the Netherlands, where all but two hostages were released, and the bus was exchanged for a getaway car.[2] The hostage-taking was finally ended when the police rammed the getaway car on the A3 motorway near Bad Honnef, North Rhine-Westphalia.[2]

During the hostage crisis, a 15-year-old boy and an 18-year-old woman were killed.[3] A third victim, a 31-year-old police officer, died in a traffic accident while chasing the hostage-takers.[3] At the time, the unfolding of events was extensively covered by West German media, which quickly spiraled into a media circus.[4][5] In the aftermath of the hostage crisis, journalists were criticised for conducting interviews with the hostage-takers, asking them to pose for photographs, and aiding them by giving them, among other things, coffee and road directions.[5] This resulted in the German Press Council banning any future interviews with hostage-takers during hostage situations.[2]

Perpetrators

[edit]

Hans-Jürgen Rösner

[edit]

Hans-Jürgen "Hanusch" Rösner was born on 17 February 1957 in Gladbeck.[6] He grew up in a family with three older sisters and one younger sister.[6] His father, who was a World War II veteran, was often violent and physically abused him throughout his childhood.[6][7] At the age of 8 or 9, an acquaintance of his father's reportedly taught him to shoplift.[6] His first conviction for theft was at the age of 14.[7]

By his late 20s, Rösner had already committed numerous thefts and burglaries, and had spent a total of eleven years in prison.[8] In August 1986, he disappeared while on parole and went into hiding at his sister's house.[7][9] One year later, he moved in with his girlfriend, Marion Löblich, and her teenaged daughter Nicole, in an apartment in the neighborhood of Rentfort-Nord.[6][7] The police, having been tipped by Rösner's ex-wife Ursula regarding his whereabouts, planned to arrest him on 16 August 1988 – the day of the bank robbery and hostage-taking.[7]

Dieter Degowski

[edit]

Dieter Degowski was born on 4 June 1956 in Gladbeck; he was the fifth child in a family of six children.[10] Like Rösner, he experienced domestic abuse as a child, causing him to develop a violent and anti-social character.[7] The two met while attending a primary school for special education.[10] In his early teens, he regularly committed minor crimes, such as shoplifting, and was first arrested at the age of 15 for stealing sedative drugs.[10] He later started stealing cars, and developed an alcohol and Vesparax addiction.[10]

In 1983, Rösner and Degowski crossed paths again when they shared a cell in Werl Prison for eight months.[10] Shortly before the bank robbery in August 1988, Degowski agreed to be Rösner's accomplice on the premise that they would use the money to establish their own car recycling business near Münster.[10] Degowski's IQ was assessed at 79.[11]

Marion Löblich

[edit]

Marion Irma Löblich (née Müller) was born on 14 April 1954 in Bremen; she was the second of eight children.[12] During her childhood, her parents often coped with financial problems.[7] In her late teens, she became pregnant with her first child and married the father.[7][12] Some time after the birth of her daughter Leila, who is intellectually disabled, she caught her husband cheating with her best friend.[7][12] She applied for a divorce in 1975, while pregnant with her second daughter, Nicole.[12]

One year later, she married her second husband in Duisburg; they moved to Gladbeck and opened a bar.[7][12] There, she met Ralf Löblich and divorced her husband in 1978 to marry a third time.[7][12] In 1980, she gave birth to a son, named Pierre.[12] The couple worked as taxi drivers for some time, but unsatisfied with her marriage, Löblich eventually left her husband to start a relationship with Hans-Jürgen Rösner.[7]

Timeline

[edit]

16 August

[edit]

In the early morning two armed and hooded offenders broke into a branch of the Deutsche Bank in the district of Rentfort-Nord in Gladbeck before opening hours.[2]

At 8:04 am, an emergency call was made to the police by a witness. A parked police car was seen by the offenders as they left the branch. They went back into the bank and took two clerks hostage, demanding a car and ransom money, firing their guns into the air several times.[2]

A radio station was the first to conduct an interview with them as the hostage crisis was happening. After several hours of negotiations, the abductors were given 300,000 DM and a white Audi 100 as a getaway car. At 9:45 pm, the getaway started. The robbers took two bank employees with them as hostages. Marion Löblich, the girlfriend of Hans-Jürgen Rösner (who was one of the robbers), boarded the car in Gladbeck.

Above: a Mercedes-Benz O305 similar to the one that was hijacked. Below: livery of the hijacked BSAG bus.

17 August

[edit]

After driving on the autobahn to Bremen, the abductors stopped in the district of Huckelriede and hijacked a public-transit bus with 32 passengers at 7:00 pm on 17 August. The media interviewed the abductors and the hostages without any interference from the police. Some hostages even had a pistol pressed against their throats.[2]

After the release of five hostages, the bus was driven to the autobahn service area of Grundbergsee. The two bank clerks were released there.

Two police officers arrested Löblich, who was using the toilet. Demanding an exchange, Degowski and Rösner threatened to kill a hostage every five minutes. After the expiration of the ultimatum they shot a 15-year-old Italian boy, Emanuele De Giorgi, in the head; he was said to be protecting his sister.[13][14] Löblich was about to be released by the police on demand of the abductors but arrived too late because of a broken handcuff key and poor police communication. An ambulance arrived 20 minutes later, but the shot teenager died two hours later in hospital.

After this incident the bus was driven towards Oldenzaal in the Netherlands. During the chase a police car collided with a truck, leaving one police officer dead and another injured.

Silke Bischoff, one of the three victims

18 August

[edit]

At 2:30 am on 18 August 1988, the bus crossed the border into the Netherlands. At 5:15 am two women and three children were released, after the Dutch police refused to negotiate as long as children were being held hostage. At 6:30 am Rösner and Degowski got a BMW 735i. The getaway car had been prepared by the police so that the engine could be stopped by remote control.[15] While attempting to escape, Löblich and the bus driver were injured.

During a stop in Wuppertal the abductors went shopping in a pharmacy.

After stopping in a pedestrian area in Cologne at 10:30 am, the car was surrounded by media and shoppers. Some reporters offered to guide the abductors on their way or to hand them pictures of police officers to prevent trickery if hostages were exchanged. A reporter, Udo Röbel, guided the abductors to a nearby rest area on the autobahn and accompanied them for several kilometres.[2]

On the A3 close to Bad Honnef, a few kilometres before the state border between North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate, a police car rammed the getaway car at 1:40 pm and rendered it immobile, triggering a gunfight. One of the hostages was able to exit the car. However, Silke Bischoff, 18, was fatally shot in the heart and died. After that the abductors were arrested.[2]

Aftermath

[edit]

On 22 March, 1991 Rösner and Degowski were pronounced guilty by the regional superior court of Essen and received life sentences. Löblich was sentenced to nine years. In 2002 the Higher Court in Hamm ascertained "guilt of a very serious nature" and Degowski's sentence was increased to 24 years. In 2004 the same Higher Court refused an application for parole and a request by Rösner to shorten his sentence. The court also declared a state of "preventive detention" ("Sicherungsverwahrung") and therefore Rösner is unlikely to be freed after the end of his sentence.

On 20 November 1988, the Minister of the Interior of Bremen Bernd Meyer resigned over mistakes by the police.

Several years after the incident, there was a public discussion at a local police academy about the incident with the judge who had sentenced Rösner and Degowski to life in prison and journalists including Udo Röbel, a reporter who had got into the vehicle with the hostage-takers and went with them, giving them directions out of Cologne. The judge praised Röbel for having prevented a potential bloodbath in Cologne by getting into the car. This was not a view expressed in the official report into the incident by a parliamentary enquiry in the state of the North Rhine Westphalia, which commented negatively on the journalists' ethics.[2]

In August 2018 it was announced by the regional court in Arnsberg that Dieter Degowski was to be released on conditional parole after serving 30 years in prison.[16]

Media conduct

[edit]

This was the first incident in Germany with direct interference by representatives of the media. The media were severely criticised for their handling of this situation and for conducting interviews with hostages (one of the journalists acting this way was Frank Plasberg).[17] As a result, the German Press Council (Deutscher Presserat) banned any future interviews with hostage-takers during hostage situations. [4][17] The head of Germany's largest journalists' union (DJV), Michael Konken, has referred to the incident as "the darkest hour of German journalism since the end of WWII".[4]

Media

[edit]
Sascha Alexander Geršak and Alexander Scheer, who portray Rösner and Degowski in the two-part dramatisation 54 Hours

A two-part dramatisation of the events, titled 54 Hours [de] (German: Gladbeck), was broadcast by ARD in March 2018.[18] The Australian crime podcast Casefile also covered the case in March 2021.[19]

A documentary titled Gladbeck: The Hostage Crisis was released in 2022 on Netflix, documenting the events throughout the entire 54 hours using raw footage, without commentary.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Altrogge, Gudrun; Dahlkamp, Jürgen; Kölling, Nadja; Schrep, Bruno (2008). "Mach es weg, mach es weg". Der Spiegel (in German). No. 33. pp. 36–42. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Mansel, Tim (20 August 2018). "Gladbeck: The deadly hostage drama where the media crossed a line". BBC. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  3. ^ a b Scheil, Detlev (30 March 2019). "Bewegende und würdevolle Gedenkstunde". Weser-Kurier (in German). Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Marek, Michael; Todeskino, Marie (16 August 2018). "German hostage drama: The day the press became the story". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  5. ^ a b Connolly, Kate (9 March 2018). "German bank raid and hostage-grab of 80s plays out in TV drama". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e "Hans-Jürgen Rösner im Porträt". RND Gladbeck (in German). Retrieved 18 June 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Bednarz, Dieter; Schrep, Bruno (25 June 1989). ""Tot sein ist schöner als wie ohne Geld"". Der Spiegel (in German). No. 26. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  8. ^ "L'Allemagne va juger des preneurs". Le Soir (in French). 1 August 1989. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  9. ^ Friedrichsen, Gisela (13 August 1989). "". . . kamen Sie gleich zur Sache, Herr Rösner?"". Der Spiegel (in German). No. 33. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d e f "Dieter Degowski im Porträt". RND Gladbeck (in German). Retrieved 18 June 2022.
  11. ^ Langenau, Lars (17 February 2018). "Freilassung von Dieter Degowski: Sündenfall des deutschen Journalismus". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 18 June 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g "Marion Löblich im Porträt". RND Gladbeck (in German). Retrieved 18 June 2022.
  13. ^ "Families of Slain Hostages File Criminal Charges against Police". AP News. 22 August 1988. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  14. ^ Image of Emanuele De Giorgi and his sister Tatiana
  15. ^ "Hostage Dies as German Drama Ends". The New York Times. 19 August 1988. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  16. ^ "Infamous 'Gladbeck gangster' to be released from jail in Germany". Deutsche Welle. 10 October 2017. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  17. ^ a b Marek, Michael; Todeskino, Marie; Grenier, Elizabeth (8 March 2018). "The hostage crisis that shook Germany's rules of reporting: Gladbeck". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  18. ^ Connolly, Kate (9 March 2018). "German bank raid and hostage-grab of 80s plays out in TV drama". the Guardian. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  19. ^ "Case 171: The Gladbeck Hostage Crisis". Casefile: True Crime Podcast. 10 April 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
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