Erfurt school massacre

Erfurt massacre
Gutenberg Gymnasium
Location Erfurt, Germany
Coordinates 50°58′53″N 11°00′53″E / 50.98139°N 11.01472°E / 50.98139; 11.01472Coordinates: 50°58′53″N 11°00′53″E / 50.98139°N 11.01472°E / 50.98139; 11.01472
Date 26 April 2002
c. 10:58 a.m.  c. 11:17 a.m. (CEST)
Target Gutenberg-Gymnasium
Attack type
School shooting, mass shooting, murder-suicide, massacre
Weapons
Deaths 17 (including the perpetrator)[1]
Non-fatal injuries
1
Perpetrator Robert Steinhäuser
Motive Expulsion

The Erfurt massacre was a school massacre that occurred on 26 April 2002 at the Gutenberg-Gymnasium in the Thuringia State capital Erfurt, Germany. (A German Gymnasium is a secondary school similar to a US High School or English Secondary School.) The gunman, 19-year-old expelled student Robert Steinhäuser shot and killed 16 people: 13 staff members, two students, and one police officer, before committing suicide. One person was also wounded by a bullet fragment.

Background

While Steinhäuser's motive is unknown, media reports assumed it to be related to his expulsion from school without qualifications and his subsequent feeling of victimhood and hopelessness regarding his future job opportunities.[2]

Robert Steinhäuser (born 22 January 1983) was a student of the Gutenberg Gymnasium until early October 2001. At the end of September 2001, he had spent a few days away from school, for which he presented a mandatory medical certificate which was quickly identified as a forgery. Because of this forgery Steinhäuser was expelled.

Due to the regulations used in the State of Thuringia (German: Thüringen) at this time, Steinhäuser on expulsion found himself with no qualifications at all, and therefore very limited job prospects.

The massacre

A memorial plaque to the shooting

On the day of the shooting, before leaving his residence at his usual time, Steinhäuser armed himself with a 9mm Glock 17[3] and a Mossberg 590 Mariner 12-gauge pump-action shotgun,[3] which was unusable due to an earlier handling error. When he entered the campus, he went into the lavatories to change his clothes, donning a black ninja-style outfit.[2][4]

The shooting started at approximately 10:58 a.m. Steinhäuser moved from classroom to classroom, pausing briefly each time in the doorway to shoot the teacher, then moving on to the next room. According to students, he ignored them and aimed only for the teachers and administrators, although two students were killed by shots fired through a locked door.[4]

Five minutes after the shooting began, police arrived outside the school. Soon after, Steinhäuser aimed from a window and fatally shot a police officer in the head. Before the shooter committed suicide, he was confronted by one of his teachers, Rainer Heise, who walked up to the demasking shooter. Pausing, having established eye-contact with Steinhäuser, he said, "Du kannst mich jetzt erschießen." ("You can shoot me now."), Steinhäuser is said to have answered, "Herr Heise, für heute reicht's." ("Mr. Heise, that's enough for today.").[5] According to Heise, he then talked to Steinhäuser for a short period of time, luring him into the doorway of an empty room. When Steinhäuser was in the doorway, Heise pushed Steinhäuser into the room and quickly locked the door. Steinhäuser committed suicide shortly thereafter and his body was found by police a few hours after the shooting.[6] 71 rounds were fired throughout the whole series of shootings.

The gunman killed 16 people in the massacre—12 teachers, two students, one secretary, and one policeman.[7]

Reactions

Steinhäuser's family issued a statement to news sources saying that they "will forever be sorry that our son and brother has brought such horrifying suffering to the victims and their relatives, the people of Erfurt and Thuringia, and all over Germany."[8]

Legacy

Steinhäuser's last words – Für heute reicht's ("that's enough for today") – was also the title of a controversial book about the massacre written by Ines Geipel, who alleged that there were several mistakes made by the police on the case. Geipel, and relatives of some of the victims, criticized police for the initial speed of their response. The police had initially believed there was a second gunman, leading them to retake the school one floor at a time rather than storm the entire building.[9]

Heise was hailed as a national hero for locking Steinhäuser in a room which ended the killing spree, but was later subject to backlash from some members of the public due to questions about his role. Erfurt Mayor Manfred Ruge said he fully believes Heise, but acknowledged the teacher's rather direct and animated style combined with the vast media coverage had caused resentment in the town.[10]

The massacre led to the development of a code word that could be broadcast over the public address system to warn teachers of a shooting. "Mrs Koma is coming", which is "amok" spelled backwards, was later used at the Winnenden school shooting to alert teachers to that attack.

See also

References

  1. Eyewitness: Erfurt massacre, BBC News, April 26, 2002
  2. 1 2 "Killer's secret behind revenge attack" The Guardian (April 29, 2002)
  3. 1 2 Gebauer, Matthias (2 May 2002). "Erfurter Amoklauf: Ladehemmung verhinderte noch größeres Blutbad" [Erfurt Rampage: Misfire prevents even greater bloodbath]. Spiegel.de (in German). Spiegel. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  4. 1 2 "How teacher stopped the school slaughter" The Observer article (April 28, 2002)
  5. superuser, superuser (27 June 2017). "Seite nicht gefunden" (PDF). Thueringen.de. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  6. Brave teacher stopped gun rampage, CNN, April 27, 2002
  7. "Massacre victims mourned". Tes.com. 6 September 2015. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  8. Family of German killer apologises Archived 2007-10-27 at the Wayback Machine., CNN, May 2, 2002
  9. "Hatte der Erfurter Amokläufer einen "Antreiber"?". Stern.de. 21 April 2004. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
  10. "German hero faces town's wrath". App1.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 3 October 2017.
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