
On March 6, 1981, Marianne Bachmeier entered a courtroom in Lübeck, Germany, pulled a pistol from her handbag, and shot dead Klaus Grabowski, the man accused of kidnapping, abusing, and murdering her 7-year-old daughter, Anna.
Grabowski, a convicted sex offender, had previously served time for abusing young girls and was on trial for Anna’s murder. He had confessed to the killing but claimed Anna tried to blackmail him — a claim the court didn’t believe. His disturbing story enraged Marianne, who felt powerless in the face of his lies.
During the trial’s third day, Marianne smuggled in a Beretta and fired seven shots, killing him instantly. She was arrested at the scene and later told the court she acted in a trance-like state, but evidence showed she had planned the act.
Marianne’s vigilante justice drew global attention. Public opinion was sharply divided — some saw her as a grieving mother defending her daughter’s dignity, others saw premeditated murder.
In 1983, she was convicted of manslaughter and illegal firearm possession and sentenced to six years but served only three. She later lived in Nigeria and Italy before returning to Germany, where she died of cancer in 1996. She was buried beside Anna in Lübeck.
Even decades later, Marianne Bachmeier remains a symbol of a mother’s grief — and the moral complexities of revenge.
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