Werner Pinzner | |
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Born | Bramfeld, Allied-occupied Germany | 27 April 1947
Died | 29 July 1986 Hamburg, West Germany | (aged 39)
Cause of death | Suicide by gun |
Resting place | Burgtor Cemetery, Lübeck |
Other names |
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Years active | 1984–1986 (14 months) |
Employer | Wiener Peter |
Style | Shooting |
Spouse | Jutta |
Details | |
Victims | Approx. 13 |
Werner Pinzner (27 April 1947, Bramfeld – 29 July 1986, Hamburg), also called "Mucki",[1] was a German contract killer who became known as the "St. Pauli Killer".[2] He was responsible for a series of contract killings and gained nationwide attention in 1986 when he fatally shot the investigating public prosecutor during interrogation and then killed his own wife before taking his own life at the Hamburg police headquarters. The case had political consequences in the city of Hamburg and is considered one of the most "spectacular" cases in the criminal history of the Federal Republic of Germany. Pinzner is also believed to have killed between seven and ten people before the Hamburg police headquarters incident.