Robert Sturm, retired chief inspector, makes one thing clear from the start: “Even thirty years after the start of Franz Fuchs’ terror bombings, there is no evidence that there were accomplices at the time.” Just in case that happens, he says. Of course it should. Robert Sturm was spokesman for the special police commission in charge of clarifying the most extensive terrorist case of the Second Republic: the xenophobic and racist attacks by the self-proclaimed “Bavarian Liberation Army”, in which four people were murdered and another 15 partially murdered in over three years they were seriously injured. The first letter bomb detonated on December 3, 1993.