BERLIN — German authorities on Wednesday carried out dawn raids against far-right suspects accused of plotting attacks on Jews, refugees and police, federal prosecutors said.
Police swooped on 12 homes and other sites in six states “as part of a federal investigation on suspicion of forming a right-wing extremist organization,” the prosecutor’s office said in a statement. Six suspects, “connected primarily via social media,” are accused of founding the group “and in early 2016 beginning plans for armed attacks against police officers as representatives of the state, asylum seekers and members of the Jewish community.”
Another seven people are believed to have offered assistance to the group, including acquiring weapons.
“The aim of today’s raids is to gather evidence of the formation of a group as well as suspected crimes and potential material for use in those crimes,” it said. “There is not as yet any evidence of specific attack plans.”
Around 200 police officers took part in the coordinated raids.
The prosecutor’s office in the southwestern city of Karlsruhe declined to provide further details.
But news agency DPA said the group was believed to belong to the “Reichsbürger” (Citizens of the Reich) movement, a shadowy far-right outfit blamed for shooting dead one police officer and wounding three others during a raid in the southern town of Georgensgmünd in October.
And in August, a member of the group — a former Mister Germany pageant winner — opened fire on police carrying out an eviction order at his house in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt.
The 41-year-old gunman was seriously wounded and three officers suffered light injuries.
The Reichsbürger group does not recognize the legitimacy of the German republic and believes in the continued existence of the German empire or “Reich.”
As a result, many members refuse to pay taxes and fines owed to the state. Authorities believe the movement has several thousand members.
A report Wednesday in Berlin’s daily Tagesspiegel newspaper, citing security sources, said that the number of far-right extremists in Germany believed to be violent had increased to 12,100 last year, up from 11,800 the previous year.