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Formation | March 5, 1951 |
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Headquarters | Klosterstraß, Berlin, Germany |
Budget | 16.58 Million EUR [1] |
Staff | 257 (2020) [2] |
Website | Offizielle Website |
The Berlin Office for the Protection of the Constitution is an intelligence service and the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution in Berlin, based in Klosterstrasse in Mitte. Its tasks include the prevention of extremism and espionage, for which it also uses intelligence resources. In 2019, it had around 257 employees and a budget of 16.58 million euros. The Office for the Protection of the Constitution, founded in 1951, is headed by Michael Fischer. In organizational terms, it is not an independent authority, but forms Department II of the Senate Department for the Interior and Sport with seven departments. [3]
On March 5, 1951, the Berlin Office for the Protection of the Constitution was founded. In 2000, the Office for the Protection of the Constitution moved from Zehlendorf to Kleistpark in Schöneberg. [4] In December 2000, the Berlin State Office for the Protection of the Constitution was dissolved by Interior Senator Eckart Werthebach due to several scandals and assigned to Department II of the Senate Department for the Interior. [5] [6] [7] This means that the Berlin Office for the Protection of the Constitution is no longer an independent authority, as are the state authorities for the protection of the constitution in seven other federal states. [8] The office is currently located at Klosterstraße 47 in Berlin-Mitte. [9]
The Berlin Office for the Protection of the Constitution is tasked with collecting and analyzing information about political extremism and espionage and passing this on to political decision-makers and the public. The work of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution is determined by this triad of information gathering, information processing and information dissemination. [10]
Department II – Constitutional Protection is divided into the following seven departments (2023): [11]
The Office for the Protection of the Constitution is accused of covering up the murder of Ulrich Schmücker in 1974. [13]
In the years before reunification, “well over a million marks [...] were spent without ‘comprehensible justification’ to ‘protect a single secret employee and his contact in the office’. [14] At least three former Stasi officers were officially employed as informants by the Berlin Office for the Protection of the Constitution.
In June 2012, the Berlin Office for the Protection of the Constitution destroyed 25 files that “might have been of interest to the Bundestag’s NSU investigative committee.”
At the beginning of January 2021, a 43-page internal paper on the AfD Berlin's loyalty to the constitution was sent to the AfD parliamentary group in the Berlin House of Representatives with a covering letter from the ranks of the Berlin Office for the Protection of the Constitution. [15] The document, which is an uncoordinated working version of the department responsible for right-wing extremism, denies the classification of the Berlin AfD as a suspected case and is intended to trivialize openly right-wing extremist statements. However, various experts see blatant scientific, methodological and technical errors in the published papers. [16] The Berlin Senate distanced itself from the paper and the head of the department responsible, who was previously responsible for the “Islamism and Islamist Terrorism” department and was unable to prevent the attack on the Berlin Christmas market at the Memorial Church by Anis Amri, was “released from his official duties” until further notice. [17] “Initial technical security measures were initiated within Department II (Office for the Protection of the Constitution)” to find out which person passed the document classified as “classified – for official use only” (VS-NfD) to the unauthorized AfD. [18]
Period | Name | Notes |
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1951–1952 | Werner Otto | From March 1951, first head of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution; former district court judge [19] |
1952–1953 | Gotthard Friedrich | |
1953–1965 | Heinz Wiechmann | Dismissed on February 8, 1965, by Berlin's mayor Heinrich Albertz after, despite being asked, he denied three times in a row that there was any evidence of visits by celebrities to the Pension Clausewitz. |
1965–1966 | Heinz Fahs | |
1966–1974 | Eberhard Zachmann [20] | |
1975–1986 | Franz Natusch | Involvement in the cover-up of the murder of Ulrich Schmücker |
1986–1989 | Dieter Wagner | 1973–1986 President of the Office for Protection of the Constitution of Baden-Württemberg |
1990–1995 | Heinz Annussek | |
1995–2000 | Eduard Vermander [21] | 1977–1987 Police President im State Criminal Police Office of Baden-Württemberg, 1988–1995 President of theState Office for the Protection of the Constitution of Baden-Württemberg |
Period | Name | Notes |
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01.07.2000–31.12.2000 | Bernhard Dybowski | Acting management while State Secretary Mathilde Koller reduced the number of employees by around 30 and had a new secret service law drawn up. |
01.01.2001–14.11.2012 | Claudia Schmid | Resignation after scandal surrounding the destruction of files on right-wing extremism with possible links to the Nationalist Socialist Underground. |
19.11.2012–15.09.2018 [22] | Bernd Palenda | until 19 August 2013 acting Senate Director Palenda was previously responsible for the supervision of the Berlin Police Service |
since 21.11.2018 [23] | Michael Fischer | previously provisionally led by Katharina Fest [24] |