The trial of the Stutthof concentration camp cannot start – the 96-year-old goes into hiding

The trial of the Stutthof concentration camp cannot start – the 96-year-old goes into hiding

As of today, a former secretary of the Stutthof concentration camp should be on trial in Itzehoe. But now the 96-year-old is wanted by arrest warrant. She is on the run.

What guilt did a young woman at the time have for thousands of Nazi crimes in the Stutthof concentration camp? As of this Thursday, a former concentration camp secretary was to answer before the Itzehoe district court because of aiding and abetting murder in more than 11,000 cases. It could be the last trial in Germany for crimes during the Nazi era.

But the now 96-year-old is fleeting. The district court had issued an arrest warrant, said the presiding judge Dominik Groß on Thursday. It remains to be seen whether one can get hold of them. The planned main hearing could then only begin after the arrest warrant has been issued and your ability to stand trial has been checked.

Irmgard F. worked from June 1943 to April 1945 in the command office of the German concentration camp Stutthof near Danzig. As a stenographer and typist, she is charged with helping those responsible at the camp with the systematic killing of prisoners. An expert opinion commissioned by the court came to the conclusion in June that the very old woman is able to negotiate, now the examination must apparently be carried out again.

A sign that reads "Landgericht"

In Germany there have recently been several trials against former members of the Nazi camp teams. According to the central office responsible for investigating Nazi crimes in Ludwigsburg, around 65,000 people, including many Jews, died in the Stutthof concentration camp and its sub-camps, as well as on the so-called death marches at the end of the war. The camp gained notoriety for the catastrophic supply of the inmates, which the SS consciously accepted, and who mainly died of exhaustion and illness.

People were murdered in the Stutthof concentration camp – or they died of want

In July 2020, the Hamburg Regional Court sentenced a former security guard in Stutthof to two years probation. The court found the 93-year-old guilty of complicity in murder in 5230 cases – at least as many prisoners were, according to the criminal chamber, murdered during the defendant’s service in 1944/45 in Stutthof.

Most of the victims died as a result of the hostile conditions in the so-called Jewish camp of Stutthof. At least 200 were killed in the gas chamber and a locked train car with Zyklon B. 30 were killed in a secret shot in the neck in the camp’s crematorium. “You watched this death then and guarded it,” said the presiding judge Anne Meier-Göring in the grounds of the judgment.

According to his own statements, the defendant Bruno D. had served with a rifle on the watchtowers. His defense lawyer Wolf Molkentin told the magazine “Spiegel” that aiding and abetting thousands of murders could also be done from a desk. In the case of a typist, however, the bar for criminal liability could be raised. “In the present case, it will also depend on whether there was knowledge of the characteristics of the murder, cruelty or insidiousness. Otherwise there would only be an aid to manslaughter, which would then be statute-barred.”

Trial in front of a youth chamber in Itzehoe

Like the trial against D., the trial against F. should also take place in a youth chamber because the defendant was only 18 or 19 years old at the time of the offense. For the first day of the trial, only the prosecution was planned to be read out. The criminal chamber has set 26 further trial dates until the beginning of June next year. How the proceedings will continue is currently unclear because of the escape of the 96-year-old defendant.

District court Hamburg: verdict spoken against concentration camp security guard

See a video from our archive from the summer of 2020: Anyone who stood as an SS man on the watchtower of a concentration camp is guilty of aiding and abetting murder. This is what the Hamburg Regional Court ruled 75 years after the end of Nazi rule.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts