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Will German police get to do secret house searches?

September 8, 2024

Germany's Federal Criminal Police Office wants to secretly break into homes as part of anti-terrorism measures. That is currently prohibited, but the interior minister has far-reaching plans.

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Düren Durchsuchung Schleuser-Ring für Chinesen
German police carrying out a raid on an alleged trafficking ring in April 2024Image: Roberto Pfeil/dpa/picture alliance

At first glance, Interior Minister Nancy Faeser's proposal is reminiscent of a method practiced by the "the Stasi," the Ministry for State Security of the former communist East Germany, whose secret police infiltrated the homes of suspected regime opponents in order to tap their phones.

The practice stopped with the end of the East German dictatorship (GDR) and German reunification in 1990.

Now, in the face of Islamist and right-wing extremist terrorist threats, Faeser wants to empower investigators to use the method once again. However, unlike the Stasi's arbitrary actions in communist East Germany, the German parliament must first give its approval.

The Interior Minister is proposing to allow the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) to enter terrorism suspects' homes in order to install spy software on their smartphones and computers.

Terror threat in Germany on the rise after Solingen?

Fear of Islamist terror

Following the recent knife attack by a Syrian Islamist in Solingen, a spokesman for Faeser justified the plan at a government press conference, especially for cases of Islamist terrorism. "In this context, we believe it is completely self-evident that security authorities must have the appropriate powers to counter it," he said, though without providing any details of the draft law, which he said the government is still debating.

It is unlikely that the neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP), the smallest partner in the three-way coalition, will agree to government-authorized secret home break-ins, as defending citizens' rights is at the heart of the party's trademark. The FDP believes international terrorism and other serious crimes can be countered without the implementation of tougher laws.

Covert online searches are allowed

At the moment, German security authorities are allowed to tap suspicious persons' electronic devices without breaking into their homes, under certain circumstances — using remote forensic software to obtain data from suspects' devices without them noticing.

German police have been allowed to use this method to monitor suspects' homes as part of "online searches" since 2017. However, every single such action must first be approved by a court — or in especially urgent cases, by a public prosecutor's office.

Section 100 of the Criminal Code describes in detail what crimes may be prosecuted with the help of "online searches." The list is long, and it includes endangering the democratic rule of law; forming criminal organizations; murder; sexual offenses; drug smuggling; money laundering; human trafficking; and asylum abuse.

What's behind Germany's far-right raids?

Landmark ruling by Germany's Constitutional Court

According to official government figures, the number of online searches has been in the low double-digit range for years — and the majority have involved drug offenses. But online searches have always been controversial. One 2008 Federal Constitutional Court ruling was considered groundbreaking, which stated that online searches are only permitted if human life or the state itself is at risk.

So covert searches are supposed to be an absolute exception when fighting crime in Germany. Open raids on homes, on the other hand, are a normal part of everyday police work. They, too, can only be carried out on the order of a court or a public prosecutor's office. As a rule, searches are undertaken in the suspect's presence.

Some raids make news headlines. A recent example of this was when the home of the head of the German right-wing extremist Compact magazine, Jürgen Elsässer, was searched to secure evidence.

The magazine had been banned by Interior Minister Nancy Faeser in July 2024. But then the Federal Administrative Court allowed Elsässer to continue publishing because the court had doubts about the proportionality of the ban, on whether it impinges on freedom of the press and freedom of opinion.

Despite the partial victory for magazine publisher Elsässer, his house could still be "secretly" searched — theoretically — because in 2021 Compact was classified as a "confirmed right-wing extremist" publication by Germany's Office for the Protection of the Constitution. That designation authorizes so-called "undercover investigations," which can include "entering a person's home" — but only remotely.

Jürgen Elsässer speaking to the media while his house is raided by police
Jürgen Elsässer, publisher of Compact magazine, is a German journalist and right-wing political activistImage: Sven Kaeuler/tnn/dpa/picture alliance

Justice minister worries about the rule of law

Justice Minister Marco Buschmann (FDP), rejected Faeser's new proposal on X: "There will be no authorization given to secretly snoop in people's homes. We don't do that in a constitutional state. That would be an absolute breach of taboo," he wrote.

Buschmann pointed out that the state did not even resort to such measures when the left-wing extremist Red Army Faction (RAF) kidnapped and murdered people in the 1970s. He urges proportionality, warning that, "If a law allows the state to secretly break into a home to search it, many people will lose their trust in the rule of law."

This article was originally written in German.

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Marcel Fürstenau
Marcel Fürstenau Berlin author and reporter on current politics and society.