Bernd Stumpf


Bernd Stumpf is a German football referee who served as a match official in the first division DDR-Oberliga of the former East Germany. He also worked as a FIFA referee and adjudicated 6 European Cup matches.
Stumpf was infamous for his role as the referee who by accusation manipulated the outcome of the 22 March 1986 championship match between BFC Dynamo and 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig which ended in a 1:1 draw that handed BFC Dynamo its eighth consecutive national title. Down to ten men after an unduly harsh red card, Lokomotive Leipzig held a 1:0 lead as the game was extended into its 94th minute without cause, until BFC Dynamo finally tied the match on a questionable penalty. At the time BFC Dynamo was under the patronage of the Stasi, East Germany's state secret police force headed by Erich Mielke, and had since its founding in 1966 benefited from player transfers that fans of other teams considered unfair, and questionable officiating.
The blatant nature of the manipulation of the decisive match led to nationwide protests by long-suffering fans. The DFV responded by placing a lifetime ban on Stumpf. However, there was no admission of complicity by Stumpf, the Stasi, or the football club, and no sanction against BFC Dynamo – their title stood regardless of the protest.
It was eventually learned that Stumpf had worked for the Stasi under the cover name "Peter Richter" since the end of his army service.
After German reunification in 1990 he trained game officials for the Thüringer Fußballverband and became part of the safety committee of the Nordostdeutschen Fußballverbandes. To this day he denies any role in manipulating matches in the former GDR.