Martin Kohlmann
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German Social Union (2006–2009)
The Republicans (–2006)
affiliationsPro Chemnitz (2009–present)
Karl Martin Kohlmann | |
|---|---|
| Leader of Freie Sachsen | |
| Assumed office February 2021 | |
| Preceded by | Office established |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 18 July 1977 |
| Party | Free Saxons (2021–present) German Social Union (2006–2009) The Republicans (–2006) |
| Other political affiliations | Pro Chemnitz (2009–present) |
| Children | 3 |
Karl Martin Kohlmann (born 18 July 1977) is a German politician and lawyer. He is the founding chairman of the Free Saxons and was a member of Citizens' Movement Pro Chemnitz, the German Social Union and The Republicans.
He is being monitored by the Saxony State Office for the Protection of the Constitution, which recognises him as a "long-standing activist in the right-wing extremist scene". Kohlmann maintained relationships with the National Socialists Chemnitz among others.[1] At the end of 2020, he gave the former neo-Nazi cadre Michael Brück a job in his law firm in Chemnitz. Kohlmann has stated he seeks the return of the Saxon Monarchy and the increased independence of the state of Saxony.[2]
After his military service in the German army from 1996 to 1998, Kohlmann studied law in Leipzig and Basel. He completed part of his legal traineeship in the Russian city of Krasnojarsk.
Kohlmann works as a self-employed lawyer. In 2010, he represented Bernd-Rüdiger Kern, a professor at the University of Leipzig, in court. The case concerned a dispute in a law lecture at a first-semester information event with Kern in the fraternity house of the Burschenschaft Arminia zu Leipzig.[3] Kohlmann's clients also included convicted Holocaust denier Günter Deckert, chairman of the NPD from 1991 to 1996.[4] In mid-October 2017, he was named by the Reichsbürger movement supporter Adrian Ursache as the third criminal defence attorney alongside the two public defenders in the ongoing trial.[5]
As a defence attorney for the right-wing extremist Gruppe Freital, he disrupted the verdict.[6] After informing the court, the Saxony Bar Association initiated proceedings against Kohlmann and examined his conduct in this regard from a professional perspective.[7] The Association of Criminal Defence Lawyers Saxony/Saxony-Anhalt then expelled him from the association.[8]
One of Kohlmann's legal focuses is the legal representation of rejected asylum seekers, especially from the former Soviet Union. The Georgian chairman of the cultural association "Tolstoi e. V." introduced numerous asylum seekers to Kohlmann as clients due to his knowledge of Russian. The television magazine Report Mainz described it as a "contradiction" that Kohlmann, on the one hand, as a Chemnitz city councillor, demands the immediate deportation of asylum seekers whose applications have been legally rejected, but on the other hand advocates for their right to remain in court.
Social commitment and private life
In 2014, Kohlmann was co-founder and initially secretary of the cultural association "Tolstoi e. V." which was initially based in his law firm and whose "aim is to promote the idea of international understanding as well as the social and cultural support of refugees, emigrants, late emigrants and national minorities." The services also include "legal advice for migrants". Until 2016, the association listed him as head of the legal department in the association's magazine "Berliner Telegraph", in which Kohlmann places advertisements.[9] Alexander Boyko, founder and editor-in-chief of the Berliner Telegraph, has been in close contact with Kohlmann since 2014. According to Report Mainz, Boyko has specifically recruited asylum seekers in the vicinity of refugee camps as clients for Kohlmann as "the only Russian-speaking lawyer for asylum law in Chemnitz."[10]
Kohlmann was born in Chemnitz and lives there to this day. He is married and has three children.[11] He is a member of the Burschenschaft Arminia zu Leipzig fraternity.
Convictions
On 9 October 2020, the Verden District Court sentenced him to a fine of 2,100 euros for incitement to hatred. Kohlmann initially appealed.
On 8 November 2022, Kohlmann was sentenced by the Chemnitz District Court to a fine of 120 daily rates of 50 euros each for incitement to hatred. The verdict initially did not become final.[12]
On 12 April 2023, it was announced that the Chemnitz public prosecutor's office had applied for a penalty order of 7,500 euros against Kohlmann for withholding and embezzling wages because Kohlmann was alleged to have paid two employees a wage below the minimum wage for three years.[13]
