In 1981, Marianne Bachmeier did something that would etch her name into criminal history. In a crowded German courtroom, she drew a small pistol and fired seven shots at Klaus Grabowski, the man who had murdered her seven-year-old daughter, Anna. Six bullets struck him. He died instantly. What drove her to that point was the kind of grief that breaks all human boundaries.
A year earlier, in May 1980, Anna had skipped school after a disagreement with her mother and fell into Grabowski’s hands — a convicted child offender who had already undergone chemical castration but was taking hormones to reverse it. He strangled the child and dumped her body in a box by a canal. His fiancée turned him in, horrified by what he’d done. When his trial began, the nation watched, furious at how such a man had slipped through the system.
On the third day of proceedings, Bachmeier smuggled in the gun. When Grabowski prepared to speak, she rose, aimed, and fired. “I wanted to shoot him in the face. Unfortunately, I hit him in the back. Hopefully, he’s dead,” she later said. The courtroom erupted in chaos, and the world took sides — some calling her a murderer, others hailing her as a mother driven beyond endurance. At her own trial in 1982, prosecutors charged her with murder, but the court accepted that she’d acted under extreme emotional distress. She was convicted of manslaughter, sentenced to six years, and released after three.
Afterward, Bachmeier sought quiet far from Germany’s glare, living in Nigeria and Italy before returning home when she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. She died in 1996, aged forty-six, and was buried beside Anna in Lübeck. To this day, her story remains one of Europe’s most famous cases of vigilante justice — a haunting reminder of the line between unbearable grief and retribution, and how love for a child can drive even the gentlest heart to tragedy.