On 13 May 2016, the Munich District Court ("Amtsgericht München") sentenced Siegfried Mauser to one year and three months' jail on probation and a 25,000 Euro penalty for sexual harassment ("sexuelle Nötigung", § 177 German Criminal Law Code) of one of his colleagues, harpsichordist
Christine Schornsheim, at the
Hochschule für Musik München. Following the verdict, Mauser suffered a nervous breakdown and received psychiatric treatment at the Christian Doppler Clinic within the Salzburg University Hospital. Subsequently, he appealed to the Munich Regional Court I ("Landgericht München I"). Here Mauser pleaded that judicial authorities had singled him out for a libertine way of life rather than criminal offence and urged "not to make" him "a victim of
zeitgeist" ("kein Zeitgeist-Opfer"). The Regional Court, though, essentially confirmed the District Court's verdict on 26 April 2017; the prison sentence was reduced to nine months on probation. Already on 19 April 2017 further charges against Mauser had become public, one of (anal)
rape and three of sexual harassment. Regarding these, Mauser was sentenced, on 16 May 2018, to two years and nine months in prison. In response, author argued that the jury had taken into account testimony by 16 witnesses; mere personal acquaintance, Bahners maintained, hardly placed Enzensberger and other friends of Mauser in a superior position to judge the events.
Peter Sloterdijk, in a spoken statement at the high-profile philosophy festival on 21 May 2016, described the District Court's decision as a stark symptom of contemporary neo-Puritan ("neopuritanische") prudery, a social and political trend eroding the achievements of sexual liberation in Germany since the 1960s. Reacting to Mauser's case, the
Hochschule für Musik München committed itself to stricter measures (both precautionary and in terms of sanctions) against sexual harassment. == Selected honours ==