Germany’s Office for the Protection of the Constitution as an Instrument for Character Assassination
But prejudgement is exactly what happened in the case of Otto
Dreksler.
For four months, the OPC enveloped Dreksler, Chief of Operations of
the Berlin Police Force, in clouds of guilt and suspicion. A mere
whisper to the OPC – and the whisperer was anonymous – was enough to
remove Dreksler from his senior position in the Berlin police.
What happened to Otto Dreksler can happen to anybody in an
environment where suspicion reigns and real evidence is ignored or
distrusted.
It began in autumn 1997. An interreligious body called Freedom for
Religions in Germany, composed of members of the Church of Scientology
and other minority religions, announced that a religious freedom march
with some ten thousand participants would take place in Berlin in
October. When Senator of the Interior Joerg Schoenbohm asked Dreksler,
who knew Scientologists to be peaceful people, if the march gave any
cause for alarm, Dreksler’s reply was negative. “You may take the
weekend off, nothing worrisome will happen,” a newspaper later quoted
him.
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