In a wooded cemetery in Munich, a white sticker with a puzzling QR code appeared on a headstone late final yr.
Then, over the subsequent few weeks, increasingly stickers mysteriously appeared, till greater than 1,000 graves had been marked like items in a grocery store.
“It’s actually unusual,” Bernd Hoerauf, who oversees the administration of the town’s cemeteries, mentioned in an interview this week. “We thought, ‘What may very well be the sense of this sort of sticker?’”
Every of the white rectangular stickers, measuring about 1 by 2 inches, bore a black QR code, a final title and a mix of letters and numbers, based on photographs revealed within the German press.
Cemeteries in Munich permit QR codes as memorials on headstones, Mr. Hoerauf mentioned, and for greater than a decade, individuals whose family members are buried in cemeteries around the globe have uploaded images and different digital keepsakes to create on-line memorials that may be seen through QR code.
However these are often etched into the headstone or carved as a metallic plate to kind a deliberate a part of the memorial to the deceased.
The current appearances in Munich additionally raised eyebrows as a result of in 2004, stickers appeared in a Jewish cemetery in Bochum, a metropolis in western Germany. These turned out to commemorate Rudolf Hess, a senior Nazi chief who served as Hitler’s deputy. The stickers gave the impression to be linked to a far-right demonstration within the city of Wunsiedel, in southeastern Germany, based on the World Jewish Congress.
On this occasion, although, the graves weren’t linked by faith, ethnicity or another discernible private attribute of the deceased, Mr. Hoerauf mentioned.
Metropolis staff first got here throughout the QR codes in December, and scanning them revealed solely the title of the deceased and the grave’s location — primarily repeating the data on the sticker, however offering no different helpful info, Mr. Hoerauf mentioned.
The stickers popped up in Waldfriedhof cemetery, a wooded house with some 60,000 graves, and within the close by smaller Sendlinger Friedhof and Friedhof Solln cemeteries, Mr. Hoerauf mentioned.
They appeared to be posted randomly, he mentioned — on previous and new graves, on carved tombstones and picket crosses.
Bewildered municipal staff initially recorded the sightings as they tried to determine the supply of the stickers.
They had been additionally a steep value to take away them, Mr. Hoerauf mentioned: anyplace from 100 to 500 euros (about $104 to $523) per sticker to strip the adhesive with out damaging the graves, a complete potential price of roughly €500,000, he mentioned.
So this week, the municipality turned to the police to analyze a legal case of property harm.
They rapidly discovered {that a} native enterprise that had been contracted to scrub and preserve sure graves was behind the QR codes, the police mentioned on Thursday. The family of the deceased whose graves had been marked with them can be notified throughout the inquiry, an investigating officer mentioned in an e mail.
The police wouldn’t title the corporate or share particulars about how that they had discovered the perpetrators, however the German information media recognized a gardening firm as being accountable.
The Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper cited Alfred Zanker, a senior supervisor at that firm, as saying that the stickers had been merely a method for workers to maintain monitor of which headstones that they had maintained.
“We’re a big firm,” he informed the newspaper. “Every thing has to occur in an orderly method.”
The police declined to remark additional, citing the persevering with investigation.