Peter-Jürgen Boock


Peter-Jürgen Boock is a German former terrorist of the Red Army Faction.

Early life

After completing secondary school, Boock began training as a mechanic but soon quit. Claiming that his father was a staunch Nazi, He then left his parents' home and travelled to the Netherlands. He became involved with illegal drugs, and was arrested for possession. Soon after this he attempted suicide. Boock spent the next few years in rehabilitation programmes and living in re-education homes, and came in contact with Gudrun Ensslin and Andreas Baader. He wanted to join the Red Army Faction but was deemed too young. He moved to Frankfurt am Main and continued abusing drugs. In 1973, he married Waltraud Liewald.

Terrorism

At some point between 1975 and 1976, Boock joined the RAF and went underground. He travelled to Southern Yemen, where he received terrorist training. He became an involved member of the second generation Red Army Faction.
Later in life, Boock would claim in an interview for the 2002 documentary series The Age of Terror: A Survey of Modern Terrorism, that he and his RAF associates were more like their Nazi fathers than they thought, saying:
One thing we found out about ourselves is that we were indeed the sons of our fathers. We very quickly reached the same point where we said all possible actions are ok. If you reach your target, all losses are ok if you reach your target. And it was quite the same thing our fathers said.

Arrest and imprisonment

Boock distanced himself from the RAF in 1980. However in 1981 he was arrested in Hamburg. He played down his role within the RAF, though was sentenced to life imprisonment terms for his involvement in the Ponto and Schleyer murders. In 1992 he admitted his full involvement in certain RAF activities, such as the Schleyer murder.
He was freed from prison on 13 March 1998 and now works as a freelance writer near Freiburg.
In 2007, he accused Stefan Wisniewski of the murder of Siegfried Buback.