Thomas Wüppesahl

Thomas Wüppesahl (born July 9, 1955 in Hamburg) is a German politician. He is a former member of the Bundestag. He was a member of Alliance '90/The Greens until 1987. His political skills are civil and political rights, domestic policy and the anti-nuclear movement.

Thomas Wüppesahl
Member of the German Bundestag
In office
1987  1990
Personal details
Born (1955-07-09) 9 July 1955
Hamburg
Nationality Germany
Political partyAlliance '90/The Greens
Alma materFachhochschule für öffentliche Verwaltung, Hamburg
OccupationCoach
ProfessionCriminalist
Websitewww.wueppesahl.de

Political career

Wüppesahl was a founder of a pressure group against Krümmel Nuclear Power Plant in Geesthacht 1975. In 1987 he became a member of the Bundestag in the Green Party faction. After leaving the party, he continued his mandate as an independent member of the parliament.

To establish his rights for working as a factionless member Wüppesahl launched and won a lawsuit basing on German constitution on the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.[1]

Wüppesahl was member of the Bundestag until the end of the 11th period in 1990. In 1990 he criticized the procedure of the German reunification gave no participation in the process to the population in Eastern Germany.[2] Recordings and printed material show his presence and competence.[3] Titanic Magazine dignified Wüppesahl 1991 as "the last parliamentarian".[4] Having given 113 speeches Wüppesahl became the most active member of this period and one of the most active members ever.[5][6] On the ceremonial act to the 60th anniversary of the Bundestag in 2009 Wüppesahl was introduced as the member of parliament who made copious use of the right of an independent parliamentarian to speak onto every agenda item of a sitting of the Bundestag.[7]

Life and profession

At age 16, in 1971 Wüppesahl joined the Hamburg Police. He studied at the Fachhochschule für öffentliche Verwaltung in Hamburg. His education was centered into white-collar crime. As a consequence of the mistreatment of demonstrators at the Hamburger Kessel in 1987 Wüppesahl and other police officers founded Hamburger Signal – Bundesarbeitsgemeinschaft kritischer Polizistinnen und Polizisten in Hamburg to support civil rights in police work.

In October 2004, Wüppesahl was arrested on information by a friend and accused of planning a bank robbery and murder.[8] Wüppesahl argued his intention had been to uncover the former policeman observing him as an unofficial police spy what he was obviously. The courts found Wüppesahl guilty and sentenced him to 4 years and 6 months of prison. After being beaten into unconsciousness by unidentified perpetrators in November 2006 he was transferred from Justizvollzugsanstalt Billwerder in Hamburg to Justizvollzugsanstalt Tegel in Berlin.[9] He was released in October 2007. Wüppesahl's complaint for rehabilitation on the European Court of Human Rights has not been decided yet.

Wüppesahl is now working as a qualified mediator and coach with a core on economical and political issues.[10]

Imtech

On 27 July 2013 Imtech announced that a criminalist officially named as "Mr. Y" had been consulted in 2011 to investigate the corruption in the reconstruction of the twin towers in Frankfurt. He identified more than he should; he warned the company in his final report in May 2011 about mafia structures and he charged the manager of the German subsidiary, Klaus Betz. Betz was covered by the company for two years. The investigator, identified by the Telegraaf as Thomas Wüppesahl, received a ban from Imtech 2011. When the corruption became known in spring 2013 the company lost a value of 1 billion Euros on the stock market.[11][12]

gollark: IT CANNOT.
gollark: It's not finished...
gollark: Here is the problem, you see.
gollark: ++help
gollark: ++search ALGOL

References

  1. Wüppesahl Urteil, June 13, 1989, 2 BvE 1/88, BVerfGE 80, 188 (online)
  2. Dieter Herberg, Doris Steffens, Elke Tellenbach: Schlüsselwörter der Wendezeit: Wörter-Buch zum öffentlichen Sprachgebrauch 1989/1990. 1997, ISBN 978-3-11-015398-9, Seite 436 (online)
  3. Eike Michael Frenzel: Zugänge zum Verfassungsrecht: ein Studienbuch. 2009, ISBN 978-3-16-150157-9, page 40 (online)
  4. Christian Schmidt: Der letzte Parlamentarier. In: Titanic, No. 1, 1991 (online)
  5. Peter Schindler: Datenhandbuch zur Geschichte des deutschen Bundestages 1949 bis 1999. Band II, 1999, ISBN 978-3-7890-5928-5, Seite 1677
  6. Ralf Altenhof: Die Enquete-Kommissionen des Deutschen Bundestages. 2002, Dissertation, ISBN 3-531-13858-8 (online)
  7. Günter Bannas: 60 Jahre Bundestag. Dönekes und allerlei Deutungen. In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 7. September 2009 (online)
  8. Kai Portmann: Ein Raubmord gegen gesellschaftliche Missstände. In: Stern, 8. Juli 2005 (online)
  9. Kurzer Weg in die Freiheit. In: Tagesspiegel, 30. Juni 2007 (online)
  10. Mediationsnetzwerk − profile of Thomas Wüppesahl
  11. Aufklärung verschleppt. Vom eigenen Management ausgeraubt. In: Handelsblatt, 27. Juni 2013 (online)
  12. Detective tipte fraude Imtech al in mei 2011. In: Telegraaf, 27. Juni 2013 (online)
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