Monika Harms

Monika Harms (born 29 September 1946 in Berlin) is a German lawyer. She has served as Attorney General of Germany from 2006-2011.

Monika Harms
Attorney General of Germany
In office
1 June 2006  30 September 2011
ChancellorAngela Merkel
Preceded byKay Nehm
Succeeded byHarald Range
Personal details
Born (1946-09-29) 29 September 1946
Berlin, Germany
Political partyChristian Democratic Union
Alma materUniversity of Hamburg
University of Heidelberg

Early life and education

Harms was born in Berlin on September 29, 1946. After completing the Abitur in Frankfurt am Main in February 1966, she started studying law at the University of Heidelberg and later at the University of Hamburg, where she did her first state exam in April 1971, followed by the second one in March 1974. Between 1971 and 1974 she also had her judicial clerkship ("Referendariat") in Hamburg.

Career

After graduating, Harms worked as a prosecutor in Hamburg until she became a judge at the regional court ("Landgericht") of Hamburg. During 1983 and 1987 she was a judge at the finance court ("Finanzgericht") of Hamburg. Afterwards she was appointed as a judge at the Federal Court of Justice of Germany in 1987, where she later became a presiding judge as well. She became the Attorney General of Germany in June 2006, an office which she held until reaching the age limit in 2011.

During her time in office, she played a crucial role in Germany's fight against terrorism. In September 2007, following a six-month investigation, her office stopped a major terrorist attack against American and German targets by arresting three Islamic militants and seizing a large amount of potentially explosive chemicals and military-grade detonators.[1]

In another much-discussed move in 2008, Harms overturned Marinus van der Lubbe's conviction of setting the 1933 Reichstag fire, after a lawyer in Berlin alerted her to the fact that he had yet to be exonerated under a law passed in 1998. The law allowed pardons for people convicted of crimes under the Nazis, based on the concept that Nazi law "went against the basic ideas of justice".[2]

Other activities

Harms, who is considered an expert in law regarding fiscal offences also works as a lecturer at the Ministry of Finance's Bundesfinanzakademie since 1990, and she held various other lectureships. In January 2008 she became an honorary professor at the University of Halle-Wittenberg.

Personal life

Harms is married and a member of the Christian Democratic Union.

gollark: What is that ””””clear solution””””?
gollark: That is definitely an extreme view.
gollark: *Would* you die? I assume you would just have some debt which they'd have to pay eventually.
gollark: I don't really trust governments to decide exactly what I "need".
gollark: I don't think you can blame it on just that. The American system appears to also have lots of bureaucracy, and indirection which reduces the incentive to have low prices.

References

  1. Mark Landler, Nicholas Kulish and Souad Mekhennet (September 6, 2007), German Police Arrest 3 in Terrorist Plot New York Times.
  2. Kate Connolly (January 12, 2008), 75 years on, executed Reichstag arsonist finally wins pardon The Guardian.
  3. Board of Trustees Archived 2016-10-18 at the Wayback Machine Friends of the Gewandhaus.
  4. Mario Beck (February 16, 2014), Leipziger Volkszeitung.
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