From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about former members of the
Nazi Party. For active
present-day Nazi groups, see
Neo-Nazism.
In the context of this article, the term
ex-Nazi, or more correctly ex-Nazi Party
member refers either to those few who were once Nazis and resigned from
the party (the NSDAP), or more often to those who belonged
to the party at the time when it was declared illegal and was
disbanded upon the victory of the Allies. Many of the latter group
had to go through a process of denazification and some were subjected
to the Nuremberg process, while others
managed to escape trial, in particular through the ODESSA organization. In the
mid-1950s, most condemned during these trials were given amnesty and subsequently
released. This article is not about the ideology of the individuals
listed, simply about their past membership in the NSDAP. In this
sense, an "ex-Nazi" may have continued to be a convinced Nazi, just
as a Communist may have remained so after his party was disbanded
and forbidden to operate in Germany or, conversely, the person may
have been a member of the party for expedient reasons and never
held the ideology.
Famous Nazi
hunters such as Simon Wiesenthal have tried to bring
all accused of crimes to justice. However, only a few of them,
famous figures such as Sebastian Wiemann and Adolf Eichmann
(judged and hanged in Ramla in
1962), have been found. Many others (Josef Mengele, Aribert Heim, Walter Rauff, etc.) escaped justice,
finding refuge in Franquist Spain
(e.g. Otto
Skorzeny), South
America (especially Juan Peron's Argentina, Chile, Alfredo Stroessner's Paraguay, Brazil, etc.) and also in some Arab states. Some
former Nazis even managed to obtain very important positions in West Germany after
the war (e.g. Kurt Georg Kiesinger, Chancellor of West Germany from 1966 to
1969). Furthermore, a number of former Nazis were recruited by the
CIA after the war (e.g.
Otto Albrecht: "Why Israel's capture of Eichmann caused panic at
the CIA", The
Guardian, June 8, 2006), as part of the Gehlen
Organization predecessor of the Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND).
Many Nazi scientists were also recruited by the US under the
code-named Operation Paperclip.
In East Germany, the Stasi,
the GDR's intelligence service, was alleged to have employed
several chief informers and agents who were former SS and Gestapo operatives[1].
Nazis judged during
the Nuremberg Trials
Nazis judged during the Doctors' Trial (1946–1947)
This list includes only those who were not executed after the
trial.
- Hermann Becker-Freyseng. Stabsarzt in the Luftwaffe (Captain,
Medical Service of the Air Force); and Chief of the Department for
Aviation Medicine of the Chief of the Medical Service of the
Luftwaffe. 20 years imprisonment commuted to ten years.
- Wilhelm Beiglböck (1905–1963). NSDAP
and SA member, Nazi medical researcher
responsible for seawater experiments in Dachau concentration camp. 15
years imprisonment commuted to ten years. Became the chief
physician of the Hospital of Buxtehude from 1952 to his death in
1963.
- Kurt
Blome.{1894-1969} Charged of euthanasia and human
experimentation. Acquitted and exfiltrated through Operation
Paperclip (see below), and subsequently hired in
1951 by the US Army Chemical Corps to work on chemical
warfare.
- Fritz Fischer
(1912–2003). Condemned to life imprisonment on charges of human
experimentation, was subsequently released in 1954 and then worked,
until retiring, for Boehringer-Ingelheim pharmaceutical
company.
- Karl Genzken
(1885–1957). Chief of the medical office of the SS, charged of
human experimentation, condemned in 1947 to life imprisonment,
released in 1954.
- Siegfried Handloser (1895–1954) .
Chief of the German Armed Forces Medical Service, condemned to life
sentence in 1947, released in 1954, and died shortly afterwards of
a cancer.
- Herta
Oberheuser (1911–1978). Doctor at Ravensbrück concentration
camp, sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for human experimentation.
Released in 1952, became a family doctor before being recognized by
a Ravensbrück survivor in 1956, and subsequently losing her medical
licence two years afterwards.
- Helmut
Poppendick (1902–1994). Chief of the Personal Staff of the
Reich Physician SS and Police, sentenced to 10 years imprisonment
for human experiments carried on in Ravensbrück. Released in
1951.
- Gerhard Rose
(1896-1992). Generalarzt of the Luftwaffe (Brigadier
General, Medical Service of the Air Force); Vice President, Chief
of the Department for Tropical Medicine, and Professor of the Robert
Koch Institute; and Hygienic Adviser for Tropical Medicine to
the Chief of the Medical Service of the Luftwaffe. Judged guilty of
war crimes and crimes against humanity, sentenced to life
imprisonment, later commuted to 20 years.
- Paul Rostock
(1892–1956). Chief of the Office for Medical Science and Research
(Amtschef der Dienststelle Medizinische Wissenschaft und
Forschung) under Third Reich Commissioner Karl Brandt and a Full
Professor, Medical Doctorate, Medical Superintendent of the
University of Berlin Surgical Clinic. Charged of human
experimentation during the Doctors' Trial, acquitted. Then worked
as medical supervisor of Versorgungs Hospital in Bayreuth, from 1953 to his
death at age 64 in Bad Tölz.
Subsequent Nuremberg
Trials
- Erhard Milch
(1892–1972). Generalfeldmarschall, worked
under Albert
Speer. Life sentence during the Milch Trial, released in 1954 and then
lived out his life in Düsseldorf.
- Franz Schlegelberger (1876–1970).
State Secretary in the German Reich
Ministry of Justice (RMJ) and served awhile as Justice Minister
during the Third Reich. He was the highest-ranking defendant at the
Judges' Trial.
Received life sentence for conspiracy to perpetrate war crimes and
crimes against humanity. Released in 1950 owing to incapacity. For
years afterward, he drew a monthly pension of DM 2,894 (for
comparison, the average monthly income in Germany at that time was
DM 535) and lived in Flensburg. Ernst Lauz and Curt Rothenberg also
received pensions after their release in the mid-1950s. 16 German
jurists and lawyers were then judged, all convicted, and most
released in the mid-1950s.
- Friedrich Flick (1883–1972). Judged in the
Flick trial, sentenced to 7 years. Pardoned
and released by John J. McCloy.
- Otto
Steinbrinck (1888–1949). Sentenced to six years imprisonment
during the Flick Trial, died in custody before the wave of general
amnesty in the mid-1950s.
- Wilhelm List
(1891–1971). Field marshall. Sentenced to life imprisonment for war
crimes and crimes against humanity during the Hostages Trial.
Released in 1952 because of poor health.
- Maximilian von Weichs
(1881–1954). General Field Marshall. Accused of war crimes, he
escaped judgment at the Hostages Trial because of his health. He
died at Burg Rötsberg near Bonn.
- Lothar
Rendulic (1887–1971). Austrian Colonel General of the
Wehrmacht. Sentenced to 20 years imprisonment during the Hostages
Trial, released in 1951 and subsequently started writing.
- Werner
Lorenz (1891–1974). Sentenced to 20 years imprisonment at the
RuSHA Trial,
released in 1955.
- Otto Hofmann
(1896–1982). Sentenced to 25 years imprisonment on charges of war
crimes at the RuSHA trial, released in 1954.
- Franz Six
(1909–1965). Sentenced to 20 years imprisonment at the Einsatzgruppen Trial,
released in 1952.
- Alfried Krupp (1907–1967). Sentenced to 12
years plus forfeiture of the Krupp Trial, his sentence was finally
overturned by John
J. McCloy, High Commissioner of the American Zone of
Occupation; released in January 1951 and all his property
restored to him.
- Ernst von Weizsäcker (1882–1951).
Ambassador to the Vatican. Sentenced to 7 years imprisonment at the
Ministries
Trial, released in October 1950, taking advantage of one of the
first amnesty.
- Ernst Wilhelm Bohle (1903–1960).
Leader of the Foreign Organisation of the NSDAP. Sentenced to 5
years imprisonment at the Ministries Trial, pardoned in 1949 by
John J. McCloy. Merchant after the war, he gave impulse to the
refoundation of an organisation for the development of German
interstate commerce with South Africa. Through some stages, to whom
belonged so called Südafrikanische Studiengesellschaften
(English: South-African Study Societies) in Hamburg, Stuttgart,
Munich and Düsseldorf since the beginning of 1950 (the Düsseldorf
Circle was led by Third Reich's Press Chief Otto Dietrich) the
Deutsch-Südafrikanischen Gesellschaft (DSAG) arose again in
1965.
- Otto
Dietrich (1897–1952). Press Chief of the Third Reich. 7 years
imprisonment, released in 1951.
- Hans Lammers
(1879–1962). Head of the Reich Chancellery. Sentenced to 20 years
during the Ministries Trial, released in 1952.
- Wilhelm
Stuckart (1902–1953). Secretary of State in the Interior
Minister. Freed after the Ministries Trial after being sentenced
three years, which he had already served. Died in 1953 of a car
crash. Some have speculated that he was assassinated by Nazi
hunters.
- Richard Walther Darré
(1895–1953). Minister for Food and Agriculture (1933–42). Sentenced
to 7 years during the Ministries Trial, released in 1950, died
three years later of cancer of the liver.
- Otto Meissner (1880–1953). Head of the
Presidential Chancellery. Acquitted during the Ministries'
Trial.
- Gottlob
Berger (1896–1975). Chief of Staff of the SS. Co-author of Heinrich
Himmler's pamphlet, Der Untermensch. Sentenced to 25 years
during the Ministries' Trial, released in 1951.
- Walter Schellenberg (1910–1952).
Head of Foreign Intelligence. Sentenced to 7 years during the
Ministries' Trial. Released in 1951, lived hereafter in Verbania (Italy).
- Lutz Graf Schwerin von
Krosigk (1887–1977). Finance Minister. Sentenced to 10 years at
the Ministries' Trial. Released in 1951. Then wrote his memoirs and
books on economic policy, before quietly dying in Essen, aged 89.
- Paul Pleiger
(1889–1985). Head of the Hermann-Göring-Werke (confiscated steel
plants employing slave laborers). Sentenced to 15 years at the
Ministries' Trial. Released in 1951.
Prominent ex-NSDAP
members
The following is a list of people who were helpful in the
holocaust.
- Wilhelm Adam (1893-1978),
participated in the Beerhall Putsch. In
1926, left the Nazis and joined the German People's Party (DVP).
After 1933, became SA Oberscharführer, later rose to the rank
of major. Captured in 1943 at Stalingrad. In 1948 returned to the
Soviet Occupational Zone and co-founded the NDPD and became Volkskammer member. Instrumental in early
days of GDR military, first in Kasernierte Volkspolizei ("Barracked
People's Police", a military police force, KVP) with the rank of
colonel, then commander of NVA (National People's Army) –
Officers' College.
- Egbert von Frankenberg and Proschlitz, military-political
commentator at the East German national radio and Chairman of the
Circle of former officers.
- Ernst Melsheimer, a district court judge in the Volksgerichtshof. Became the GDR's
Generalstaatsanwalt (chief public prosecutor).
- Erich Apel, helped organize slave labor to produce V2 rockets
for Wernher
von Braun (see below). Became the GDR's Chairman of the State
Planning Commission with the rank of Deputy Chairman of the Council
of Ministers (Deputy Prime Minister). Died in 1964 over
disagreements with Walter Ulbricht over state economic
planning directions. Death officially listed as suicide.
- Manfred
Ewald, President of the German Gymnasts' and Sports' Club. One
time SED Politburo member.
- Gunter
d'Alquen (1910–1998). Chief editor of the SS weekly Das Schwarze
Korps and commander of the SS-Standarte Kurt Eggers.
Fined DM 60.000 in 1955 by a Denazification court, deprived of civil
rights for three years, and debarred from drawing an allowance or
pension from public funds. After further investigations, fined
again DM 28.000 in 1958.
- Max Amann
(1891–1957). Obergruppenführer and publisher of the Franz
Eher Nachfolger, the central publishing house of the NSDAP.
Sentenced to 10 years in labour camp in 1948, released in
1953.
- Benno von
Arent (1898–1956). Oberführer, died in Bonn in 1956.
- Artur Axmann
(1913–1996). Official in the Hitler Youth. Worked post-war as a
sales representative.
- Richard Baer
(1911–1963). Sturmbannführer, commander of the Auschwitz I
concentration camp. Lived under the pseudonym of Karl Neumann after
the war, before being discovered in 1960 and arrested.
- Alfred
Baeumler (1887–1968). Nazi philosopher, one of the proponent of
a biological and racist interpretation of Nietzsche (an
interpretation repudiated by most post-war scholarship).
- Werner Best
(1903–1989).
- Ernest Biberstein
{1899-1986} SS Major Commander, EK 6/Egr. C. Found Guilty in 1948
trial and sentenced to hang 1949; sentenced changed 1951 by High
Commissioner John
J. McCloy to life sentence; released 1958; reported to have
been "Co-worker" with Gehlen Organisation
- Carl Diem
(1882-1962). Chief organizer of the 1936 Olympic Summer Games in
Berlin. Held top posts in the Nazi Sports Office, Nationalsozialistischer
Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (NSRL). After WW2 he also held the
main jobs in the highest sports bodies of the German Federal
Republic.
- Horst Ehmke
(born 1927), later SPD politician and Minister under Willy Brandt
- Erhard
Eppler (born 1926), SPD politician
- Martin Fellenz, former member of the SS, member of the FDP
liberal party after the war, arrested in June 1960.
- Reinhard von Brysonstofen former member of the state secret
police Gestapo, change his name to Bryson and left Germany after
the war, for the USA.
- Eugen
Fischer (1874–1967), appointed by Hitler rector of the
University of Berlin, and one of the leading theorists of scientific
racism
- Fritz
Fischer, (1908-1999) historian
- Friedrich
Flick (1883–1972), industrial leader and billionaire.
- Dieter
Hildebrandt (born 1927), cabaret artist
- Hans Sommer, SS
Untersturmführer instrumental in the bombing of seven synagogues in
Paris in October 1941. Subsequently worked for the Gehlen Organisation and West Germany and
subsequently Italy, but in
reality as an agent for the GDR's Stasi.
- Martin
Heidegger, philosopher.
- Herbert von Karajan (1908-1989),
conductor, joined the NSDAP in 1933 in Salzburg, Austria, five years before the Anschluss.
- Kurt Georg Kiesinger (1904-1988),
NSDAP later CDU and Chancellor of Germany.
- Helmut
Knochen (1910-2003), SS Standartenführer (equivalent of
colonel) in France (1942-44) under Carl Oberg's authority (SS and Police
Leader). Sentenced to death in France before receiving a
presidential pardon in 1958. He was released by President De Gaulle
on November 28, 1962, retired in Baden-Baden where he lived free
until his death.
- Klaus Konrad (1914–2006), took part in the 1943 San Polo
massacre in Italy, in which Eugenio Calò, a Partisan, died. Became a SPD deputy in the Bundestag from 1967 to 1972
(see de:Klaus Konrad).[2]
- Horst Kopkow,
(1910-1996) SS Major protected by MI5 and MI6
- Walter Kopp,
Wehrmacht Lieutenant Colonel, chief of one stay-behind networks code-named Kibitz-15
after the war. He was described by his own North-American handlers
as an "unreconstructed Nazi," in CIA documents released in June
2006[3].
- Alfred Krupp, (1907-1967).
NSDAP and SS sponsorship, industrialist involved in weapons; steel;
and slave labor. Sentenced to 12 years and loss of all his
property; pardoned by North American High Commissioner John J. McCloy in
1953 & all of Krupp's property restored to him.
- Gustav Krupp
(1870–1950) ran the German Friedrich Krupp AG heavy industry
conglomerate from 1909 until 1941. Indicted for prosecution at the
1945 Nuremberg trials, the charges were dropped
because of his failing health.
- Heinz
Lammerding, (1905-1971) commander of the 2nd SS Division Das Reich involved in the
Oradour-sur-Glane massacre.
- Fritz Lenz
(1887–1976), founder of the
Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and
Eugenics and one of the leading theorists of eugenics and of scientific
racism.
- Siegfried
Lenz (born 1926), author
- Theodor Maunz, specialist of public law, then minister of
Education and Culture in Bavaria.
- Carl Oberg, (1897,
1965) SS and Police Leader (equivalent
of general) he headed all German police units in France since 1942
to 1944. Like his mate Helmut Knochen, sentenced to death
before getting presidential pardon (1958) ; released by Pdt De
Gaulle on Nov. 1962, he retired free in Germany until his death in
1965.
- Theodor Oberländer, (1905-1998)
NSDAP member, SA-Obersturmbannführer, later became Refugee Minister
under Konrad
Adenauer.
- Heinz
Reinefarth (1903-1979) an SS Brigadeführer who became mayor of Westerland in December 1951
- Karl Ritter von Halt The last
supreme leader (Reichssportführer) of the Nazi Sports
Office, Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen
(NSRL). He also held top jobs in the highest sports bodies of the
German Federal Republic, like President of the German Olympic Committee.
- Franz
Schönhuber (1923–2005). Waffen-SS, later chairman of the right-wing
Die Republikaner party which
he co-founded in 1983.
- Carl Schmitt
(1888–1985), Nazi jurist and philosopher.
- Hanns-Martin Schleyer,(1915-1977)
SS, later employer representative, kidnapped and murdered by Red Army
Faction.
- Albert Speer
(1905–1981), Hitler's chief architect, sentenced to 20 years in
prison at Nuremberg, became a noted author on Third Reich
history.
- Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, NSDAP
member, soprano singer.
- Fritz
Thyssen, (1873-1951) NSDAP member since 1931, steel
industrialist.
- Erich von dem Bach (1899–1972).
Obergruppenführer, commander of troops fighting the Warsaw
Uprising. Imprisoned after the war, but never judged for his
role in the Eastern Front.
- Guido
von Mengden (1896-1982) Held a key post as propaganda leader in
the Nationalsozialistischer Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (NSRL),
the Sports Office of the Third Reich. Was later praised as the
"spiritual father" of many post-war sports programs and German
sports. He was an advisor for the 1972 Summer Olympics in
Munich.
- Otmar Freiherr von
Verschuer (1896–1969), director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute
of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics, he carried out experiments on human beings
in concentration camps. Awarded in 1951 the prestigious
professorship of human genetics at the University of Münster, where he
established one of the largest centers of genetics research in West
Germany.
United
Kingdom
- Mychailo Fostun, former member of the 14th SS Division Galicia (rank Corporal)
and guard at the Trawniki camp, and general secretary of the
Association of Ukrainian Former Combatants in Great Britain (old
comrades group of the 14th SS Division Galicia)[4].
- See also Rimini
List[5]
Nazis or Nazi collaborators who worked for the UK secret services
after the war
Middle
East
- Alois
Brunner. {b.1912}. Head of Drancy internment camp near
Paris, worked for the Gehlen Org before escaping to Syria through
a ratline organised by Catholic bishop
Alois Hudal. Thought
to be living in Syria, he has been condemned in 2001 by a French
court, in absentia, to a life sentence for crimes against
humanity.
- Ludolf von Alvensleben
(1901–1970). SS-Gruppenführer and Major General of the Police
(1943). Fled to Argentina after the war.
- Adolf
Eichmann (1906–1962). Obersturmbannführer in charge
of deportation of the Jews in Nazi Europe. Kidnapped in 1960 by the
Israeli MOSSAD in Buenos Aires and moved to Israel,
he was judged and hanged in Jerusalem.
- Josef
Mengele (1911–1979). SS officer in Auschwitz, nicknamed
Angel of Death. Escaped to Argentina under Juan
Peron's rule in 1949, then to Altos, Paraguay in 1959. Chased by Nazi
hunters, he flew away to Brazilian town Embu, near São Paulo. He died of a stroke in Bertioga.
- Walter Rauff
(1906–1984). SS-Standartenführer and member of the
RSHA. Worked
for Chilean intelligence. Arrested in 1962, but freed by the
Chilean Supreme Court five months later. Died in Chile in 1984 of
lung cancer. His funerals were the occasion of a Nazi
celebration.
- Edward
Roschmann (1908-1977). "The Butcher of Riga". SS "Hauptsturmführer" and one of the heads
of the concentration camp at Riga.
Hid for the most part in Argentina and speculated to have been a
leader of the post-war ODESSA
network of fugitive SS officers.
- Paul
Schäfer (founder of Colonia Dignidad
in Chile – see below.)
- Walter
Schreiber (1893–?) (See below)
- Franz Stangl
(1908–1971). Head of Treblinka extermination camp. Escaped to Italy
with Gustav Wagner, then Syria
through a ratline organised by Catholic bishop Alois Hudal. Moved
to Brazil in 1951. Tracked down by Simon Wiesenthal in 1967, he was
finally extradited to Germany where he died in prison.
- Carl Værnet
(1893–1965). Danish SS, member of the DNSAP, the Danish Nazi party, and doctor at Buchenwald concentration
camp. Fled to Brazil and then Argentina after the war.
- Gustav Wagner (1911–1980).
Deputy commandant of Sobibór
extermination camp in Poland. Escaped with Franz Stangl to
Italy, where he transited through a ratline organised by Catholic
bishop Alois Hudal.
Flew to Brazil, where the Brazilian
Supreme Court rejected an extradition request in 1979.
According to his lawyer, he committed suicide the next year.
- Hugo
Schmeisser. {1884-1953} In October 1945 Hugo Schmeisser was
forced to work for the Red Army and instructed to continue
development of new weapons.
- Hermann Weber DE, RU
- Hundreds of scientists.
Over 1,500 German and other foreign scientists, technicians, and
engineers were brought to the United States under Project Paperclip and similar programs[6].
A non-exhaustive list includes:
- Kurt Blome,
(1894-1969) Judged during the Doctors' Trial, hired in 1951 by the US
Army Chemical Corps to work on chemical warfare. Eventually, Blome
was arrested by French authorities, convicted of war crimes, and
sentenced to 20 years in prison. (See above).
- Wernher
von Braun, {1912-1977} SS Major; NSDAP membership; NSFK; rocket scientist of both
the Nazi V-2 rocket (V for Vergeltungswaffen or "retaliation weapons")
program and later the first Director of NASA.
- Konrad
Dannenberg {1912-2009} NSDAP member/Rocket Scientist-brought
over in "Operation Paperclip"
- Arthur
Rudolph, {1906-1996} NSDAP member, rocket scientist of the Nazi
rocket Vergeltungswaffen (V-2) and later NASA. According to the US government, he left the
US in 1984 following the Department of Justice's discovery of his
role in the persecution of prisoners at the Nordhausen factory[6].
- Bernhard
Tessmann (1912–1998)
- Georg Rickhey, a former official at the Nordhausen underground V-2 rocket factory who
arrived in 1946 but who left the United States in 1947 when he was
tried (and acquitted) for war crimes by a U.S. military
tribunal[6].
- Walter
Schreiber (1893–1952?), who had been instrumental in medical
experiments on concentration camp inmates and who fled the United
States to Argentina in 1952 after the appearance of a newspaper
column about his activities[6].
- Alexander Lippisch (1894–1976)
- Hans von
Ohain (1911–1998) One of the inventors of jet propulsion he
became director of the US Air Force Aeronautical Research
Laboratory and by 1975 he was the Chief Scientist of the Aero
Propulsion Laboratory there.
- Kurt Lehovec
(one of the physicists responsible for the invention of the integrated
circuit).
- Hubertus Strughold (1898-1987)
(father of US space medicine)
- Felix Jeager (1903–1977)
- John Porrini (1920-1981)
See List
of German rocket scientists in the United States
Nazis or Nazi collaborators who worked for the US secret services
after the war
Members who
resigned
Living
Nazis
This is a list of NSDAP members that are still alive and
presumed/considered war criminals. Due to the fact that there have
been many Nazis living as fugitives since that time, the fates of
many remain unknown, see below:
Known to be
alive
- Milivoj
Ašner, (born 1913) Former police chief in the Independent State of
Croatia who enforced racist laws under Croatia's Nazi-allied Ustaša
regime, which murdered hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews and Roma. He currently resides in Austria.
- Herta Bothe,
(born 1921) Aufseherin
who served at both Stutthof and Bergen Belsen during
the war.
- Luise Danz, (born
1917) Aufseherin
at various camps, including Plaszów, Majdanek, Auschwitz-Birkenau, and Malchow. Was tried and
convicted as part of 1946 Auschwitz trial in Poland. She was
released in 1956. Was brought to trial in 1996 for her activities
at Malchow, but was dismissed due to her age.
- John
Demjanjuk, (born 1920) a Ukrainian and an accused SS guard at Sobibor extermination camp.
Deported to Germany from the United States in 2009.
- Klaus Dylewski (born 1916) SS guard and Gestapo official in
Auschwitz concentration camp
- Søren Kam,
(born 1921) Member of the DNSAP, the
Danish Nazi Party, who fled from Denmark to Germany after the war,
and is now a German citizen. On September 21, 2006, Kam was
detained in the German town of Kempten im Allgäu. He is wanted in
Denmark for the assassination of Danish newspaper editor Carl
Henrik Clemmensen in Copenhagen in August 1943.
- Erich
Priebke, (born 1913) Hauptsturmführer of the SS, he participated
in the Ardeatine massacre in Rome, on March 24, 1944, where he had
a hand in the deaths of 335 Italian civilians.
- Martin
Sandberger (born 1911) SS Standartenführer and commander of
Sonderkommando 1a of the Einsatzgruppe. As of August 2008 he is the
highest ranked SS officer known to be alive
- Paul
Schäfer, (born 1921) founder of the Colonia Dignidad cult in Chile after
the war, charged of child-abuse and of the 1976 disappearance of Juan Maino and possible
involvement in Boris Weisfeiler's disappearance.
Currently serving a 20 year prison sentence for the sexual abuse of
25 children.
- Samuel Kunz, (born 1920) a Russia-born ethnic German and an SS guard at Belzec extermination camp.
Believed to
be alive
These people have not been confirmed to be dead.
- Alois
Brunner - born 1912, responsible for the deaths of 140,000
Jews, head of Drancy internment camp near
Paris. Worked for the Gehlen Organisation after the war and then
fled to Syria. Possibly living in Brazil or Syria under alias Dr. Georg Fischer. The Wiesenthal Center believes he may have died
in 1992. [2]
- Dr. Bruno Beger
(born 1911) Anthropologist, SS-Captain, provided Nazi physician Dr.
Hirt with detainees of diverse ethnic types from various
concentration camps in order to serve Hirt's lethal racial
experiments
- Hermann Hubig (born 1912) SS Standartenführer and commander of
Einsatzkommando 1b of the Einsatzgruppe A
See also
References
Notes
- ^ Book Claims Stasi Employed
Nazis as Spies, Deutsche Welle, 31.10.2005
- ^
AGI, La strage nazista
di San Polo - il tribunale militare di la spezia assolve
Handsk, 27 February 2007 [1] (Italian)
- ^ Why Israel's capture of
Eichmann caused panic at the CIA, The Guardian, June 8, 2006
- ^
Daniel Foggo, London man denies role in SS
massacres, The Telegraph, 25 January 2003
(English)
- ^
Daniel Foggo, Police to use NHS records to
find Nazi war criminals, The Telegraph, 22 June 2003
(English)
- ^ a
b
c
d
Foreign Scientist Case Files
1945–1958, on the US National
Archives and Records Administration (NARA) website
Bibliography
- Blowback: America's Recruitment of Nazis and Its Effects on
the Cold War, Christopher Simpson
- The Encyclopedia of World War II Spies, Peter Kross,
Barricade Books, 2001.
- "CIA's Worst-Kept Secret" Consortiumnews.com, May 16,
2001.
- Spy Book: The Encyclopedia of Espionage, Norman Polmar
& Thomas Allen, Random House, 1997.
- Encyclopedia of the Central Intelligence Agency, W.
Thomas Smith, Facts on File, Inc., 2003
- Nazi Criminals and the State Security Service: The Secret
Policies of the GDR in Dealing with the Past, Henry Leide,
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2nd Rev Feb 2006.
External
links