Nazi crimes: Former concentration camp secretary Irmgard F. is dead

Nazi crimes: Former concentration camp secretary Irmgard F. is dead

Nazi crime
Former concentration camp secretary Irmgard F. is dead






As a 96-year-old, Irmgard F. came to trial for aid to murder. The judgment of the Itzehoe Regional Court became final last year. Her death has been a few weeks ago.

The former concentration camp secretary Irmgard F., condemned for aid to mass murder. Several media had previously reported on their death.

On December 20, 2022, the district court Itzehoe sentenced to a juvenile sentence of two years for a help to the murder in 10,505 cases and attempted murder in five cases. The Federal Court of Justice confirmed the judgment on August 20 of last year.

In autumn 2021, the trial started against F. because she had fled from her retirement home to Hamburg before the first appointment. The court had the then 96-year-old in custody for five days.

Desk work as aid

Irmgard F. was an 18 to 19-year-old woman between June 1943 to April 1945 as a stenotypist in the command of the concentration camp near Gdansk. Almost the entire correspondence of the warehouse was convinced of the dishes over her desk. She was a close confidante by the camp commander Paul Werner Hoppe.

The secretary was charged with the killing of prisoners by the hostile conditions in the camp, in the event of death transports and in a gas chamber. According to the Documentation Center in Arolsen Archives, around 110,000 people from 28 countries were imprisoned in the Stutthof concentration camp and its 39 external camps. Almost 65,000 did not survive.

F. knew about what was happening in the camp

Through her work, she provided those responsible for the concentration camp in the systematic killing of imprisoned help. Supporting activities could also be legally regarded as aid to murder. The Federal Court of Justice explained that Irmgard F. led both physical and mental aid through their willingness to serve.

Based on the findings of the Itzehoe Regional Court, the federal judges assumed that Irmgard F. knew very precisely about what was happening in the camp. So she looked over part of the site from her work, saw the chimney of the crematorium, knew about the miserable state of the prisoners.

No neutral work as a secretary

From the beginning of her activity, the secretary also recognized that the main perpetrators around camp commander Hoppe acted criminically. Due to her loyal services, she had solidarity with them, so that her actions were no longer neutral.

dpa

Source: Stern

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