Career
Proll was the younger sister of Thorwald Proll and met Andreas Baader and Gudrun Ensslin through him. He left the group relatively early in its history, after being involved in firebombings in Frankfurt in 1968. Proll was involved in bank robbery.
She was the getaway driver for Andreas Baader when he escaped from police custody with the help of Gudrun Ensslin, Ulrike Meinhof, Ingrid Schubert, Irene Goergens in 1970.
Proll, along with Manfred Grashof, was stopped by police on 10 February 1971 but managed to get away. However in Hamburg on 6 May of the same year, Proll was finally arrested after a pump-attendant at a petrol station recognized her from a wanted poster and alerted the police.
She attempted to flee but was surrounded by armed officers and arrested. Once she was detained, her run in with the police in February was turned into an attempted murder charge even though she never even fired a shot.
She was imprisoned but released on health grounds (being kept in complete acoustic isolation in prison caused her health to deteriorate) and transferred to a sanitorium.
While at the sanatorium, Proll was required to report to the police, but she soon escaped and went underground. With these she obtained a variety of jobs. She worked as a youth worker, a gardener, in Lesney"s toy factory as maintenance mechanic, and finally, after taking welding classes, as a teacher of car mechanics.
During this time, she tried to maintain a low profile in spite of working as a mechanic, an atypical female occupation then and now.
On 15 September 1978 Proll was discovered and arrested by the Special Branch of the police. She was detained and fought extradition.
The case attracted both supporters and opposition. Supporters suggested that the fact that she was teaching under-privileged children mechanics in a workshop in West Hampstead was a token of her political repentance and good faith.
Critics suggested that as Proll was a lesbian the marriage to Puttick could only be a marriage of convenience.
She herself decided to return to West Germany in 1979 to fight her case there. Back in Germany, Proll"s attempted murder charge was dropped when it was gathered that the state had withheld information that could have cleared her but she was still sentenced to five and a half years imprisonment on account of bank robbery and falsifying documents. However, she had already spent at least two-thirds of that time in German and English prisons and therefore was released immediately.
She did not rejoin the Baader-Meinhof Gang.
Proll went on to study film and photography at the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg and later became a picture editor for magazine and newspaper. She was the first to assign Martin Parr and Wolfgang Tilmans magazine work for the German market.
Proll participated in interviews about her time in the Baader-Meinhof Gang and has published a photography-based book about the gang entitled Pictures on the Run. She has worked, as recently as 1999, as a picture editor in the United Kingdom.
During a radio chat show, when asked if she was "terribly ashamed" of being associated with the Royal Air Force, Proll said she was not, but went on to say that she did disapprove of their increasingly violent acts.
Having previously worked as a photo editor, she is currently advising the young think tank xaidialoge on how to conceptualise democracy in a language of pictures.