The Drive: 400 Meters of Carnage
On December 1, 2020, at approximately 12:35 p.m., 51-year-old Bernd W. took the wheel of a stolen Jeep Wrangler bearing Koblenz license plates. He had deliberately stolen the vehicle hours earlier from Dillingen an der Saar and set his sights on Trier as his destination. Now he accelerated through Nikolaus Street and onto the main square—a distance of approximately 400 meters through a crowded pedestrian shopping zone adjacent to the Christmas market.
The people Bernd W. encountered on his route had no chance to escape. It was midday, and the street was packed with families, pensioners, and tourists. The result was catastrophic: five people were killed at the scene or shortly after. Among the victims was 9-week-old Lara S. and her 45-year-old father Isaac S. from Trier—both struck in the same moment. Three others also perished: a 45-year-old woman from Trier, a 56-year-old Swiss national, and a 73-year-old man from Trier. Eighteen additional people were injured, two of them critically. Prosecutors meticulously documented the destruction along the entire route.
The Perpetrator: Suicide Through Mass Murder
Bernd W. was 51 years old, unemployed, and living in Trier. Unlike similar cases of mass vehicular attacks, there were no signs of extremist or terrorist motives. Instead, experts concluded he suffered from severe depression and personality disorder. In the hours before the attack, W. had sent text messages to friends threatening suicide—it appeared he was seeking a way to die and chose to do so through a spectacular act of violence.
Investigators from Trier police headquarters and the German Interior Ministry quickly ruled out that W. was part of a terrorist network or acted from religious-political motives. Federal Prosecutor General Anneke Riedel declared on December 2, 2020, that there were "no signs of terrorism." W. survived the attack: a police officer shot him as he attempted to flee, and he was arrested. His German citizenship and complete lack of ideological motivation made the case a rare example of a mass rampage motivated solely by psychological factors.
The Trial: Criminally Responsible Despite Depression
On March 15, 2021, the main trial began at the Trier Regional Court under Judge Thomas Belling. Prosecutors charged Bernd W. with five counts of murder and 16 counts of attempted murder. The defendant admitted to the act but attempted to deny his criminal responsibility. However, multiple psychiatric evaluations concluded that W. was fully criminally responsible despite his depression and personality disorder—he had understood the consequences of his actions and could have acted differently.
The defense argued for the defendant's abnormal psychological state, but prosecutors convincingly demonstrated that W. had planned the attack and deliberately chosen the location. On March 31, 2021, the Trier Regional Court issued its verdict: life imprisonment for five counts of murder and 16 counts of attempted murder. The court also imposed preventive detention to prevent future danger. Bernd W. did not appeal—the sentence is final.
The Victims: Names and Fates
The five people killed came from different walks of life, but all were in the wrong place at the wrong time. Nine-week-old Lara S. and her father Isaac S. were torn from life together—an incomprehensible loss for their family. The three other victims—the 45-year-old woman from Trier, the 56-year-old Swiss national, and the 73-year-old man from Trier—left behind grieving families and friends who still carry the trauma. The injured—including two with life-threatening injuries—bear both physical and psychological scars.
The city of Trier and the entire region were shocked. In the days following the attack, memorial services and vigils took place. The case renewed focus on a difficult question: How can society prevent such violent crimes committed by mentally ill perpetrators? And what responsibility do society and authorities bear when warning signs are overlooked?
Legal and Social Consequences
The Trier attack is regarded as one of Germany's most serious incidents of this type without extremist backing. Legal experts viewed the Regional Court's verdict as consistent: despite his mental illness, W. was held fully accountable. The preventive detention order signals that he poses a danger even after serving his sentence.
The case continues to raise difficult questions: Could the attack have been prevented? Why did friends or authorities not respond to the suicide threats? And how can public spaces be better protected without diminishing quality of life in city centers? The answers are elusive—but December 1, 2020, remains a day of sorrow and warning in Trier's collective memory.