Rudi Heinz Elten

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Rudi Heinz Elten
Born(1977-06-24)24 June 1977
Died10 August 2009(2009-08-10) (aged 32)
Cause of deathShooting
Other names"Eschli"
Occupation(s)Pimp, debt collector
AllegianceBandidos MC

Rudi Heinz Elten (24 June 1977 – 8 October 2009), nicknamed "Eschli", was a German outlaw biker, gangster and member of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club. Elten was shot dead in Duisburg on 8 October 2009 by Timur Akbulut, a prospective member of the rival Hells Angels Motorcycle Club.

Background[edit]

Elten was part of the hooligan scene around FC Schalke 04 and had previous criminal convictions for robbery, extortion, breach of the peace, bodily harm and threat.[1] He worked as a bouncer and debt collector, among other things, and began a career as a pimp around the same time as he joined the Bandidos.[2] Officially registered as unemployed, he acted as an agent for prostitutes and operated from a brothel. Elten had a reputation in the biker scene for being violent and difficult to control.[3][4]

Death and subsequent legal case[edit]

On 8 October 2009, Timur Akbulut, a Turkish professional mixed martial artist and Hells Angels prospect,[5] was travelling in a car with his older brother and was stopped at a red light near the Bandidos clubhouse in Duisburg when he was recognized by Elten. The men had been involved in previous disputes. Elten began to provoke his rival, even after Akbulut had drawn a gun. According to witness testimony, he is said to have called "Na komm, mach, schieß doch!" ("Come on, do it, shoot!"). Akbulut fired four shots, with one of them hitting Elten in the head. Two uninvolved women were narrowly missed by ricocheting bullets.[6] Akbulut and his brother fled the scene, and he turned himself into police the following day. Elten later died in the emergency room.[7]

Elten's funeral took place in Gelsenkirchen on 16 October 2009, with around 1,500 Bandidos members from across Europe attending the funeral service. The accompanying police operation in place to prevent further violent clashes between the rival biker groups cost around 600,000.[8][9]

Akbulut was convicted of manslaughter over Elten's killing and was sentenced to eleven years in prison on 30 August 2010.[10] The court denied Akbulut's claim of self-defense and considered it proven that the perpetrator only shot so as not to lose face. According to the judges, Elten's death was caused unintentionally and there was an absence of premeditation. The process took place under massive security precautions. Representatives of both clubs attended the trial and had to be shielded from one another by the police.[11][12]

Aftermath[edit]

Elten's killing came during a period of relative peace between the Bandidos and Hells Angels, who had been involved in a gang war since around 2004. Delegates from both clubs had met at a Magdeburg hotel on 10 December 2008 to discuss a peace treaty but no agreement could be concluded.[13] A renewed upsurge in gang violence ensued following Elten's death, especially in Duisburg. Around fifty Hells Angels armed with clubs stormed a bar frequented by Bandidos in Duisburg's red-light district on 31 October 2009, leaving the bar destroyed and several people injured. Around a hundred police officers were needed to stop the violence. Several hours later, a hand grenade was thrown through the window of a Hells Angels clubhouse in Solingen. The grenade failed to explode, and police later detonated the device in a controlled explosion.[14] Mutual attacks on the respective clubhouses of the groups were carried out on 17 May 2010, whereby the police could not intervene given the number of violent bikers on both sides.[1] In the course of these developments, the special commission for motorcycle gang crime in North Rhine-Westphalia was expanded.[15]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Rockerkrieg in Deutschland: Gleiches mit Gleichem Sebastian Beck, Süddeutsche Zeitung (17 May 2010)
  2. ^ Jörg Diehl; Thomas Heise; Claas Meyer-Heuer (2013). Rockerkrieg. Warum Hells Angels und Bandidos immer gefährlicher werden (in German). München: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. pp. 177–189. ISBN 978-3-421-04569-0.
  3. ^ Brüchiger Rockerfrieden: "Schieß doch!" Jörg Diehl, Der Spiegel (30 May 2010)
  4. ^ Jörg Diehl; Thomas Heise; Claas Meyer-Heuer (2013). Rockerkrieg. Warum Hells Angels und Bandidos immer gefährlicher werden (in German). p. 181.
  5. ^ Cehennemin ‘Türk meleği’ Asim Gürsoy, Hürriyet (26 March 2010)
  6. ^ 13 Jahre Haft für Hells Angel gefordert Annika Fischer, Der Westen (20 August 2010)
  7. ^ Mord: Täter stellte sich der Polizei Neue Ruhr Zeitung (9 October 2009)
  8. ^ Beginnt jetzt der Rockerkrieg in ganz Deutschland? Dirk Decker and Stephan Uebel, Bild (17 October 2009)
  9. ^ Rocker-Begräbnis kostet 600.000 Euro Gerhard Voogt, Rheinische Post (19 October 2009)
  10. ^ Schüsse vor Duisburger Kneipe Westdeutscher Rundfunk (30 August 2010)
  11. ^ Duisburg: "Es wollte keiner sein Gesicht verlieren" – 11 Jahre Haft für den Hells-Angels Timur Akbulut Thomas Rodenbücher, xtranews.de (30 August 2010)
  12. ^ Schüsse vor Duisburger Kneipe: Rocker muss elf Jahre ins Gefängnis Westdeutscher Rundfunk (30 August 2010)
  13. ^ Harte Jungs auf Kuschelkurs Jörg Diehl, Der Spiegel (12 April 2010)
  14. ^ Biker gang brawl followed by a grenade attack The Local (1 November 2009)
  15. ^ Stefan Schubert (2013), Wie die Hells Angels Deutschlands Unterwelt eroberten (in German), p. 249