The defeat of Nazi Germany in May 1945 did not bring the history of the Third Reich to an end but opened it in dozens of different directions, with some leaders being tried at Nuremberg, others disappearing among defeated soldiers or civilians, and some managing to live for years under assumed names. The documentary examines the final fate of the most important leaders of the Third Reich, including Heinrich Himmler who adopted the identity of an unknown sergeant and died by cyanide capsule, Hermann Göring who was found dead in his cell hours before his execution, Martin Bormann who disappeared in Berlin and was not confirmed until decades later, Rudolf Hess who was the last prisoner of Spandau for twenty-one years, Erwin Rommel who was the only general whose death was secretly ordered by Hitler, Adolf Eichmann who lived eleven years in Buenos Aires as a factory worker, Josef Mengele who died free thirty-four years after the end of the war, and many others who faced trials, escapes, or mysterious disappearances.
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The Final DESTINY of NAZI Generals | How the Most IMPORTANT LEADERS of the Third Reich DIEDHinzugefügt:
In May 1945, Germany's defeat did not bring the history of Nazism to an end.
It opened it in dozens of different directions. Improvised cells, checkpoints, and alpine hideouts, Allied prisons, and clandestine routes toward other continents. The power structure that for years had operated through seals, orders, and rigid hierarchies was reduced to forged documents, false identities, and decisions made within minutes. Some leaders were put on trial using written evidence they themselves had created. Others tried to disappear among defeated soldiers or displaced civilians. Several died before ever answering before a tribunal, while some managed to live for years under assumed names. Where does the history of Nazism truly end? In Berlin, in Nuremberg, or in the postwar escapes, we examine the absolute reality behind the final fate of each of the most powerful leaders of the Third Reich, Ernst Carlton Brunner.
He inherited control of the Reich main security office in January 1943.
He was Austrian, trained as a lawyer with a scar across his cheek from a student duel, and had been the principal organizer of the SS in Austria before the annexation. Under his leadership, the RSHA machinery continued operating with full efficiency until the final days of the war. The extermination camps remained active until the advancing front made their operation impossible, and Colton Bruner continued signing execution orders even when defeat had already become inevitable.
As the front collapsed in Austria, Colton Bruner moved south. He was captured by American troops on May 12th, 1945 in a cabin in Altos in the Austrian Alps. One of the most wanted faces on the Allied list of war criminals at Nuremberg. Colton Bruner built his defense around a distinction he repeated systematically. He was the head of intelligence services, not the commander of security operations. He argued that the Gestapo, the mobile extermination units, and the concentration camps answered to chains of command that did not pass directly through him.
Prosecutors presented hundreds of documents signed by him authorizing executions, deportations, and camp operations. The contradiction between his verbal defense and the documentary evidence was so pronounced that the tribunal explicitly cited it in the verdict. The execution took place on October 16th, 1946 in the gymnasium of Nuremberg prison. He was the last man that night to step onto the gallows. His final words were a salute to Germany.
Martin Borman.
He reached his position of maximum influence not through the visible channels of power but through control of access. As Hitler's private secretary from 1941 onward, he decided who could see him, which documents reached him, and which requests were presented. This role as gatekeeper made him the man with the greatest practical influence over the furer's day-to-day decisions. The man who never appeared in news reels, yet whose signature was required for any bureaucratic process demanding Hitler's attention. On May 1st, 1945, one day after Hitler's death, Borman took part in several attempts to escape the chancellory bunker while the Soviet army fought only meters away. The groups trying to leave Berlin through Soviet positions came under fire from multiple directions. The party secretary was last seen that night near the Viden Dama Bridge attempting to use the movement of a German tank trying to break through toward the north. For 25 years, Borman's whereabouts remained one of the most pursued mysteries of the postwar era.
The Nuremberg tribunal tried him in absentia and sentenced him to death.
Visenthal and other investigators maintained active files on reported sightings in Paraguay, Brazil, and Argentina. Theories surrounding his escape through the exfiltration networks known as the rat lines fueled decades of speculation.
The remains discovered near Lerta station in 1972 were examined and identified as belonging to Borman based on dental comparisons and contextual evidence. The identification was questioned for decades because the forensic procedures of the time were not conclusive. Deoxy ribbonucleic acid analysis conducted with living descendants later confirmed that the remains were indeed Borman's. He had died on the night of May 1st 1945.
possibly from the effects of a nearby explosion or possibly from a cyanide capsule in the streets of Berlin while attempting to escape.
Rudolfph Hess he was the third most powerful man in the National Socialist Party during its rise to power. His loyalty to Hitler was almost religious in nature built over years of close association since the earliest days of the movement. As deputy furer, his real influence gradually diminished as Borman took control of access to Hitler and a new generation of ministers consolidated their own power bases. On May 10th, 1941, Hess took off alone in a messmitt BF 110 from the Augsburg airfield and flew across the North Sea towards Scotland. He carried documents outlining a peace proposal. Germany would withdraw its forces from Western Europe. Great Britain would recognize German interests in the east and both powers would form an alliance against the Soviet Union. He parachuted into Scottish territory and was detained by a local farmer. Hess's true motivations were never fully established. Hitler immediately declared him insane, shielding the regime from any implication in a unilateral peace mission. Churchill kept Hess imprisoned without publicly disclosing the proposal. He was tried at Nuremberg and sentenced to life imprisonment. On August 17th, 1987, Hess, the sole remaining prisoner of Spandow since 1966 when the other convicted men had either died or been released, was found unconscious in a garden shed inside the prison with an electrical lamp cord tied around his neck. He was 93 years old.
The official cause of death was hanging.
For years, the Hess family and some historians argued that it was physically impossible for a man of his age and physical condition to have carried out the act himself, claiming instead that he had been eliminated to close a case no one wanted to keep open indefinitely.
The official investigation found no evidence of third party involvement.
Spandow prison was demolished just weeks after Hess's death to prevent the building from becoming a site of pilgrimage.
Vilhelm Kuba Cuba administered Bellarus with the nearly unlimited authority the Reich granted to its general commissioners in the eastern territories. His jurisdiction covered a territory the size of Western Germany inhabited by millions of people subjected to an occupation whose central logic was systematic exploitation and the selective elimination of the population. Q.B. organized deportations, supervised mass executions, and managed the logistics of an administration that used the term pacification to describe operations that left entire villages empty. In Minsk, the capital of the occupied territory, he lived in an apartment inside the main administrative building, attended by local domestic staff selected by the occupation authorities themselves.
Yelena Mazanik had worked as a servant in that apartment for months. Her access was routine. her presence invisible to a man who regarded Bellarusian domestic workers as little more than functional furniture. Mazanic was a member of the partisan resistance and had established contact with underground networks searching for a way to reach Cube.
Formal security was extensive, but no protocol accounted for the woman cleaning the bedrooms. The resistance supplied her with a timed explosive device. Mazanic placed it beneath the mattress of the bed on September 22nd, 1943. The bomb detonated shortly after midnight. Cub died instantly. Within hours, the SS responded with the standard repressive logic of the occupation. 1,000 men executed in Minsk as direct retaliation. The number was not arbitrary, but the result of a formal policy establishing reprisal ratios for every partisan action, translating the death of a German administrator into the numbered deaths of local civilians.
Mazanic escaped into the forests and survived the war.
Hinrich Himmler Himmler built the largest apparatus of state terror in modern history. From his position at the head of the SS, he transformed what had once been a 100man escort guard into an organization operating parallel to the state, controlling the concentration camps, the political police, the mobile extermination units, the internal intelligence services, and much of the Reich's elite military structure. The decision to implement the systematic extermination of Europe's Jewish population passed across his desk in the form of planning memoranda, construction budgets, and operational capacity statistics. He administered the Holocaust with the mentality of an efficient bureaucrat.
In the final months of the war, Himmler made a decision no one inside the Reich would have considered possible. He attempted to negotiate a separate peace with the Western Allies behind Hitler's back. He offered the surrender of German forces on the Western Front in exchange for an armistice that would allow Germany to continue fighting the Soviet Union. The offer was rejected and news of it reached Hitler through the BBC before any envoy officially informed him. Hitler stripped Himmler of all his positions for treason. The man once regarded as the second most powerful figure in the Reich was removed from the chain of command during the final weeks of the war. When Berlin fell and the Reich fragmented into local capitulations, the former SS chief attempted to disappear among the masses of German soldiers surrendering or scattering across the country. He adopted the identity of a field police sergeant named Hinrich Hitittinger, shaved off his distinctive mustache, and joined a military column moving westward.
British troops detained him during a routine checkpoint inspection on May 23rd, 1945 near Brema. Hitinger's documents were technically consistent, but visual comparison with wanted lists exposed him. He was transferred to British military intelligence headquarters in Lunberg for formal identification.
During the medical examination ordered before any substantive interrogation, a doctor attempted to inspect the inside of Himmler's mouth. At that moment, the prisoner made a deliberate movement of his jaw. The cyanide capsule he had concealed in a dental cavity shattered.
Doctors attempted to induce vomiting and counteract the poisoning, but potassium cyanide acts on the central nervous system within seconds. Himmler died 15 minutes later without having uttered a single word of substance.
Carl Dernitz. He directed Germany's submarine war with a level of technical competence that even his adversaries acknowledged while fighting against its effects. The Atlantic campaign he planned sank 15 million tons of Allied shipping and came close to severing the supply lines that kept Great Britain in the war. His submarines operated under the Wolfpack doctrine he himself developed coordinated nighttime attacks, encrypted communications, and concentrated force against the most vulnerable convoys.
Hitler's political testament appointed him head of state in the furer's final hours. On May 7th, 1945, General Alfred Yodel signed the unconditional surrender in rhymes under Donuts's authority. The Finsburg government was dissolved on May 23rd when British forces arrested its members. Donitz was taken to Nuremberg as a defendant. The tribunal sentenced him to 10 years in prison for war crimes, specifically for the order not to rescue survivors from sunken ships, although the defense argued that Allied navies had issued similar orders. He served his full sentence in Spandow prison. Donitz was released in 1956 and lived in retirement in Almul near Hamburg, maintaining until his death that he had merely fulfilled his duty within the limits of international law.
He died of a heart attack on December 24th, 1980 at the age of 89, the last of the convicted men from Nuremberg to die.
Roland Frysler Frysler presided over the People's Court, the judicial body of the Reich designed to prosecute the regime's political enemies under the formal appearance of legal process. His method was systematic public humiliation. He interrupted defendants, shouted at them, prevented them from presenting their defense, and delivered sentences with calculated theatricality intended to turn every trial into an act of propaganda. The accused appeared in civilian clothing because their belts and suspenders had been removed so they could not stand upright properly. In 3 years, Frysler sentenced more than 5,000 people to death, including the conspirators behind the July 20th, 1944 assassination attempt against Hitler.
The trials of the conspirators were filmed on Hitler's orders to be shown to troops as a warning. The recording showed Frysler screaming at German army officers with decades of military service who remained silent, unable to defend themselves. When General Friedrich Olrich attempted to speak, Frysler cut him off with the words, "You do not have the floor here." Field Marshal Irvin Fonvitz Liban appeared holding up his trousers with one hand because his belt had been taken away. He was sentenced and executed the same day.
On February 3rd, 1945, Frysler was presiding over the trial of businessman Fabian von Schlabendorf in the main chamber of the people's court in Berlin when an Allied air raid began. The building suffered direct hits. A roof beam collapsed into the courtroom while Frysler attempted to take cover, carrying the defendant's case file with him. He was crushed to death instantly.
Schlabendorf, the defendant on trial that day, survived in the basement and was freed at the end of the war. The file Frysler was holding when he died belonged to a man he was about to sentence to death. The doctors who arrived at the scene identified him by the documents he carried. He was taken to a hospital where he died shortly afterward without regaining consciousness. No public funeral tribute was delivered by the regime. Hitler, informed of Frysler's death, remarked only that Fryler was the German Vishinsky, referring to the Soviet prosecutor of Stalin's trials, and made no further comment. Frysler was buried in Berlin. His wife attended the funeral. No high-ranking official of the Reich was present.
Joseph Gerbles. Gerbles built the Reich's propaganda industry from the ground up. His ministry controlled radio, cinema, the written press, theater, and the visual arts throughout occupied Germany, coordinating the production of a coherent symbolic universe in which the war was presented simultaneously as an ideological crusade, a defense of Western civilization and the expression of the Germanic race's historical destiny. The effectiveness of his apparatus did not rest solely on censorship, but on its ability to replace reality with an alternative narrative possessing enough internal coherence to remain temporarily believable. While Soviet armies crossed the Vistula, German radio broadcasts reported strategic defensive victories.
Gerbles was one of the few members of the inner circle who maintained genuine personal contact with Hitler. When Hitler decided to remain in Berlin until the end, the propaganda minister was the only member of the Reich's political family who voluntarily chose to stay in the bunker. His wife Magda and their six children also descended into the underground levels of the chancellory.
Magda Gerbles had already made her decision clear. None of her children would live in a world without national socialism. The names of all six followed the same initial pattern, each beginning with the letter H in honor of Hitler.
Helga, Hildigard, Helmut, Haldin, Hedvig, and Haida, ranging in age from 12 to four years old. On the night of May 1st, 1945, one day after Hitler's death, Magda administered morphine sedatives to the children while they slept. Once unconscious, she placed cyanide amples between their teeth and crushed them shut. All six died without regaining consciousness.
Gerbles and Magda then went up to the Chancellory Garden. What happened there in the following minutes was reconstructed from the testimony of the few bunker staff members who survived.
Both took cyanide. Some accounts include an additional gunshot, possibly carried out by one of the agitants present, although the forensic evidence recovered by the Soviets was incomplete and the exact sequence of events remains uncertain. The bodies were partially burned in the garden under prior instructions from Gerbles. Following the same method Hitler had ordered for his own remains. During the bunker's final days, he organized the broadcast of final radio speeches and drafted proclamations no one would ever read because the printing presses were no longer operating. The propaganda machine continued functioning in his mind long after there was nothing left to propagate.
Ilsa Kauk Kau arrived at Bukinvald as the wife of the camp commander and did not remain on the margins of its operations. She moved through the compound carrying a whip, supervised prisoner formations, and inflicted physical punishment directly. Survivors described her as an active presence within the system of violence, not a passive observer. The defining element of her case was the accusation that she ordered the manufacturer of objects made from the skin of tattooed prisoners.
According to testimonies presented in later trials, Ko selected prisoners with visible tattoos, ordered their execution, and used their skin to produce decorative items. The material evidence found in the camp facilities was presented at Nuremberg and turned her name into a symbol of the most extreme degradation of the concentration camp system. She was sentenced to life imprisonment in Dhaka, but US General Lucius Clay reduced the sentence to 4 years, citing insufficient evidence. The decision triggered such a public backlash that the US Senate launched an investigation. She was released and later rearrested by German authorities who sentenced her again to life imprisonment in a second trial. She died on September 1st, 1967 by suicide in her cell at Achak prison. She was 60 years old. Her son, born during her first period of custody, changed his name after discovering who his mother was.
Adolf Ikeman.
He headed office 4B4 of the Reich Main Security Office, the department responsible for the logistics of the extermination of Europe's Jewish population. His role was not ideological but operational. He coordinated train schedules and negotiated deportation quotas with the governments of occupied countries. When railway transport became scarce because the Vermachar needed it for the front, Aishman organized forced marches on foot in which thousands died along the way. He was the manager of the Holocaust. With Germany's defeat in May 1945, Iikman adopted a false identity and moved through Allied prisoner of war camps without being identified. In 1950, he reached Argentina through the exfiltration network that used documentation from the international committee of the Red Cross to transport former Reich members to South America.
He settled in Buenosire under the name Ricardo Clement, worked in a MercedesBenz factory and lived for 11 years in a suburb of the city with his family. The Mossad located him in 1959 through information provided by Fritz Bower, a German prosecutor who had received the lead from a Holocaust survivor. A team of Israeli agents intercepted him on a street in Buenosiris as he got off the bus that took him home from work. He was restrained, placed in a vehicle, and taken to a safe house where he remained for 9 days. He was then smuggled out of Argentina on an LL flight using forged documents identifying him as an airline crew member. The trial held in Jerusalem between April and December 1961 was the most widely watched in history up to that time. Ikeman appeared inside a reinforced glass booth. For weeks, he testified that he had simply followed orders, that he was a functionary within a system, and that moral responsibility belonged to those who designed policy, not those who implemented it. The court rejected every variation of that argument. He was found guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death.
He was executed by hanging on June 1st, 1962. His ashes were scattered in the Mediterranean Sea outside Israeli territorial waters so that no place would remain where his followers could build a symbol. He was the only Nazi criminal executed by the state of Israel.
Otto Scorzani.
He was the SS officer who on September 12th, 1943 carried out the rescue operation of Benito Mussolini from the hotel Imperator in the Aenine Mountains where the Italian government was holding him after his removal from power.
Gliders and airborne troops landed on the mountain side, overwhelmed the guards without significant gunfire, and extracted Mussolini in a small aircraft that took off from the rough terrain of the mountain. The operation was widely publicized by the Reich Ministry of Propaganda as an example of military audacity. At the end of the war, he surrendered to American forces. He was tried at Darko in 1947, accused of ordering his troops to wear Allied uniforms during the Arden's offensive in December 1944, which would have constituted a violation of the laws of war. The defense called Allied General Walter Bedell Smith as a witness who stated that Allied forces had used similar tactics. The tribunal acquitted him. In 1948, he escaped from a German interment camp where he was awaiting denazacification proceedings with the help of former SS officers who provided him with documents and transport. He settled in Spain where Francisco Franco's regime did not extradite former members of the German Reich. From Madrid, he ran a network of contacts connecting former German officers scattered across Europe and South America, advised several governments on counter intelligence operations and worked as a military consultant for clients that declassified intelligence files identify only partially. The Israeli intelligence service, Mossad, contacted him in the 1960s and used him as an intermediary to locate former Reich members in the Middle East who had offered their services to Arab governments. Scorzani cooperated in exchange for guarantees regarding his own security. The operation was partially declassified decades later. He died of lung cancer in Madrid on July 5th, 1975 at the age of 67. He was the only highlevel operational SS officer to live the entire post-war period in freedom under his own name without serving any sentence. Irvin Raml.
He was the commander of the North African campaign between 1941 and 1943.
A period during which his operations in the Libyan and Egyptian deserts against British forces earned him a military reputation that the Reich Ministry of Propaganda turned into a national symbol. He was the only top level German general whose image was compatible with that of a professional soldier without direct association with the regime's crimes. a distinction that set him apart from the rest of the high command. His involvement in the July 20th, 1944 conspiracy against Hitler was peripheral. Several of the plotters had contacted him as a potential authority figure for the post assassination period, but Raml did not participate in the operational planning. When the attempt failed, the Gustapo investigation reached the contacts linking him to the conspirators. The evidence was not sufficient for a formal trial, but it was sufficient for Hitler.
On October 14th, 1944, two generals arrived at his home in Hurlingan with direct instructions from Hitler. They presented him with two options. A trial for treason before the people's court, a process that would include the arrest of his family or a cyanide capsule with a guarantee of a state funeral and protection for his wife and son. RML was given 15 minutes to decide. He chose cyanide. He left the house, got into the vehicle brought by the generals and died during the journey. The regime announced his death as the result of wounds sustained in an Allied air raid over Normandy months earlier. The state funeral was held with full military honors. Hitler sent a wreath. The most famous field marshal of the Reich was buried under a fabricated narrative that his family knew about and which his son Manfred present in the house on the day of the general's visit, later confirmed publicly after the war. RML was the only member of the German high command whose death was ordered by Hitler carried out in secret and officially presented as something else. No other general of the Reich died in that manner.
Ysef Turboven Turboven arrived in Norway in April 1940 as Reich Commissioner for the occupied territory. His direct appointment by Hitler placed him above the military occupation structure. He governed the territory through systematic reprisal methods, mass executions of civilians in response to resistance sabotage, deportations of Norwegian Jews to camps in the east, violent suppression of strikes, and any form of organized passive resistance. His relationship with the Norwegian population was defined by episodes such as the Telvag executions in 1942 when he ordered the complete destruction of the fishing village where two British intelligence agents had been hidden. The houses were burned, the adult men deported to concentration camps in Germany where most died, and the women and children sent to camps within Norway. The operation was intended to demonstrate explicitly that concealing resistance activities carried a calculated collective cost. On May 8th, 1945, the date on which Germany's unconditional surrender came into effect, Turboven summoned his closest collaborators to Skum, the Norwegian royal estate he had requisitioned as his official residence.
They drank champagne. Then, with 50 kg of dynamite placed throughout the estate's bunker, Turboven detonated the charge. The explosion was audible for miles. No identifiable remains were left. The head of the SS police in Norway, Wilhelm Radius, committed suicide the same day in the same Skullum complex. The coordination was not coincidental, but the result of a joint decision taken in the preceding hours.
Two of the most violent administrators of the Norwegian occupation chose the same day and terminal outcome, although Reedis used a firearm and Turboven used explosives. Rudolfph Husse.
He was the first permanent commander of Awitz, a position he held between May 1940 and November 1943, and briefly returned to oversee the extermination operation of the half million Hungarian Jews deported in the summer of that year. During this period, he designed and refined the camp's industrial infrastructure, the organization of train arrivals, the selection process on the ramp that separated those sent directly to gas chambers from those registered as forced labor, the optimization of crematorium capacity, and the management of space between barracks to maximize the number of prisoners the complex could sustain simultaneously.
Under his direction, Ashvitz Burkanau reached the capacity to kill and cremate more than 4,000 people per day. When the Soviet armies approached Awitz in January 1945, Hurse was no longer at the camp. He had been reassigned to administrative duties within the inspection of concentration camps. With Germany's surrender in May, he adopted the identity of France Lang using documents belonging to a Criggs marine sailor and settled on a farm in the Schlesig Holstein region of northern Germany. He worked as a farmer for nearly a year. The documentation was solid and the physical labor and lack of profile prevented any contact with occupation authorities. His capture came in March 1946, not due to his own mistake, but because his wife, under pressure from Allied investigators, revealed the farm's location. He was arrested at night, immediately identified and taken into Allied custody. He was then handed over to Poland. The Polish Tribunal tried him in Warsaw. The sentence was death by hanging. The execution took place on April 16th, 1947 in the Awitz complex next to crerematorium 1 on a gallows constructed specifically for the occasion. The location of the execution was not a bureaucratic choice but a deliberate decision. The man who had designed the death of more than a million people was hanged on the very ground where the system he built operated.
Herman Guring.
He had been the second most powerful man in the Reich for nearly a decade.
Hitler's designated successor until the failures of the Luftvafer in the battle of Britain and the collapse of the Stalingrad airlift demonstrated that his operational promises lacked technical foundation. As founder of the Gestapo, head of the Luftvafer, Reichkes Marshal with a rank superior to any other German officer and director of the 4-year plan that prepared the German economy for war, he held more formal titles than any other member of the cabinet. He also accumulated art. His network of agents confiscated approximately 1,500 works from Jewish museums and private collections across occupied Europe to decorate his residence at Karinhal in Prussia. In the final days of April 1945, while Hitler remained in the Berlin bunker, Guring sent a telegram from Burka's garden interpreting a previous decree by Hitler as an automatic transfer of supreme command to him. Given that Hitler was besieged and cut off, Hitler interpreted the telegram as treason and ordered his immediate arrest. The SS detained him in Burka's garden on April 23rd. He was later freed by his own guards when the complex was taken by French troops in the first days of May. Guring surrendered voluntarily to the United States 7th Army on May 8th, expecting preferential treatment due to his rank. The Americans sent him to Nuremberg. At the trial, he was the most active defendant. He contradicted prosecutors and built a defense based on the supremacy of the state over international law, which was rejected, but forced a more rigorous argumentation than anticipated. He was found guilty on all charges and sentenced to death by hanging. He requested to be shot, arguing that a military officer deserved a military death. The request was denied. On the night of October 15th, 1946, hours before the scheduled execution, Guring was found dead in his cell with symptoms of cyanide poisoning.
How he obtained the cyanide remains one of the unsolved mysteries of Nuremberg.
Theories include that he had hidden it in a hair cream container since arriving at the prison, that a sympathizer within the prison staff provided it to him weeks earlier, or that he had concealed it in a bodily cavity during months of custody.
No subsequent investigation was conclusive. A review of inspection records did not reveal the moment the object passed security. Guring left a note stating that no German would take the uniform of a Reich marshal to the gallows.
Hannah Reich.
She was the Reich's most prominent test pilot. The first woman to fly a helicopter indoors, the first to pilot a jet aircraft in Europe, and the only woman awarded the Iron Cross first class. She tested experimental aircraft under conditions that male pilots refused, considering them suicidal. When Berlin was under siege and the Reich was collapsing, Reich landed on the east west axis in Berlin under Soviet fire to visit Hitler in the bunker. She remained inside for several days. She tried to persuade Hitler to leave the city. He refused.
It was one of the last direct contacts with Hitler before his death, and she described that conversation in detail for decades, consistently maintaining that Hitler had been betrayed by those around him. She was interrogated by American forces for 18 months and released without charges. Her accounts of the final days in the bunker became primary sources for historians. After the war, she trained the Ganaian Air Force and continued flying into old age.
She never expressed remorse for her loyalty to the regime. She died of a heart attack in Frankfurt in 1979 at the age of 67, having flown her last flight only weeks earlier. The only figure from the final circle of the bunker to die free without trial and without recounting.
Reinhardt Hedrich Hydrrich headed the Reich main security office from its creation in 1939. Coordinating the Gestapo, the security service of the SS, the criminal police and foreign intelligence services under a single organization.
He was the operational architect of the final solution. He presided over the VA conference on January 20th, 1942. the meeting where representatives of German ministries coordinated the administrative details of the systematic extermination of Europe's Jewish population. His organizational efficiency was recognized even by his enemies within the apparatus. When he needed results, he obtained them without requiring approval from multiple superior authorities because Himmler had delegated executive authority to him in virtually all operational matters of Reich security. In September 1941, he was appointed acting protector of Bohemia and Moravia. His administration combined mass executions in the early days with a calculated labor welfare policy for industrial workers, repress those who resisted, and improved conditions for those producing armaments for the Reich. Hydrich was known for not using visible personal escorts during his routine movements. He considered traveling with an armed convoy a sign of weakness and believed no one in the protectorate had the operational capacity to attack him. On May 27th, 1942, his official vehicle slowed to take a sharp turn in the holist district of Prague. Gabch attempted to fire his submachine gun, but the weapon jammed.
Kubis threw a modified grenade that exploded next to the vehicle's rear right wheel. Hydrich was struck by metal fragments and debris from the car's interior, including seat fibers. He initially ordered the attackers to be pursued before collapsing. He was taken to the German University Hospital in Prague where doctors assessed his injuries, rib fractures, perforation of the diaphragm, and damage to the spleen.
The wounds were serious but not immediately fatal. The decisive factor was the fibers and bacteria introduced into the abdominal cavity by the fragments. In the following days, Hydrich developed septicia. The antibiotics available in 1942 were unable to control the systemic infection. He died on June 4th of multiple organ failure. He was 38 years old. German reprisals included the destruction of the village of Liiche.
Its adult men were executed and the women and children deported. The two paratroopers were killed in an SS assault on their hiding place in Prague.
Hydrich was buried with state honors in Berlin. His successor to the position was captured in a mountain cabin in Austria attempting to convince his captives that he was fundamentally an intelligence officer, not an executioner.
Hinrich Müller, he headed the Gestapo from 1939 until the end of the war, becoming the chief of the most feared political police apparatus in occupied Europe. His career within the Reich was unusual. He had served as a criminal police officer in the VHimar Republic, investigating both communists and Nazis alike, and his late entry into the party was a bureaucratic obstacle that Himmler and Hydrich ignored because his technical competence as a police investigator was exceptional. Müller was not an ideologue. He was a professional enforcer of repression who applied his skills with indifference to the political content of orders. Under his direction, the Gestapo developed techniques of extracting information through systematic torture, a civilian informant system that turned neighbors into state spies and surveillance protocols for tracking underground networks that dismantled most resistance organizations in occupied territories.
Müller personally supervised the investigation of the July 20th, 1944 assassination attempt against Hitler, which resulted in more than 4,000 arrests. He was last seen in the chancellory bunker on May 1st, 1945, the day after Hitler's suicide.
After that date, nothing verified.
Senior figures of equivalent rank within the security apparatus left traces.
Identified bodies, accounts of capture, documented surreners. Miller left none.
Theories about his fate branched out for decades. Anonymous death in the chaos of Berlin, recruitment by Soviet intelligence, escaped to South America.
None were confirmed. In 1963, a mass grave discovered in the area of the former air ministry produced a skeleton initially identified as Müller through dental comparison.
Wilhelm Kitle. Kitle held the position of chief of the armed forces high command from 1938 until the end of the war, coordinating all German military operations under Hitler's direct authority. His role was fundamentally administrative and transmissional. He received decisions from the Supreme Command and converted them into formally signed operational orders. This position made him the signer or issuer of documents authorizing the execution of Soviet political commissars, the shooting of civilian hostages in occupied territories, and the treatment of Soviet prisoners of war outside the protections of the Geneva Convention.
His defense that he was merely transmitting superior orders was central to his trial at Nuremberg and was rejected. On May 8th, 1945, he signed the instrument of unconditional surrender in Carl'sh, Berlin before Marshall Jukov, completing the formal act that had begun in rhymes the previous day. It was the final official signature of his career. Two weeks later, he was in Allied custody. At Nuremberg, he was found guilty of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and crimes against peace.
The tribunal rejected the argument of obedience to superior orders as a defense, establishing a precedent that still underpins contemporary international humanitarian law. The sentence was death by hanging. Kitle requested to be shot instead of hanged, arguing that shooting was a soldier's death, and the request was denied.
In the early hours of October 16th, 1946, Kitel stepped onto the gallows in the gymnasium of Nuremberg prison. The assigned executioner was US Sergeant John C. Woods, who had calculated the length of the rope according to the condemned man's weight to ensure an instantaneous cervical fracture. The calculation failed. The trapdo was smaller than those used in most World War II prisoner executions, limiting the possible drop length. As a result, Kitle did not die from a broken neck, but from progressive asphixxiation. The attending physician certified that the process lasted 24 minutes. Eyewitnesses described movement and sounds throughout that interval.
Adolf Hitler.
Hitler ruled Germany from January 30th, 1933 until April 30th, 1945, accumulating an unprecedented concentration of power in modern European history. Chancellor of the Reich, head of state, Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, and absolute leader of the party. With no balancing structures capable of limiting his decisions, he spent the final weeks of the war in the Reich Chancellory Bunker, 12 m beneath the building's rear garden, in a complex of concrete rooms where situation meetings were held around maps that no longer corresponded to any verifiable operational reality.
On April 20th, 1945, his 56th birthday, he received the last visit from several members of his inner circle before they began to leave Berlin toward the south or the west.
Hitler chose to remain. On April 29th, he married Eva Brown, who had traveled to Berlin to be with him in the bunker against his instructions. He drafted both his political and personal testaments that same night. The political testament blamed the Jews for the war, appointed Duritz as his successor and expelled Himmler and Guring from the party for treason. The bunker staff, who had been hearing Soviet artillery at a distance of only meters for days, received orders to prepare gasoline for the burning of the bodies.
On April 30th, 1945, at some point in the afternoon, Hitler and Ava Brown withdrew to their private quarters.
Those remaining in the waiting room heard a gunshot. Accounts of exactly what happened in those minutes differ in detail. Whether Brown took only cyanide or was also shot, whether Hitler shot himself first and took cyanide simultaneously or in sequence, and the exact order of events.
Soviet forensic analyses of the remains recovered from the garden, conducted decades later, identified bone fragments consistent with Hitler and signs of cyanide poisoning. The bodies were taken to the garden, dowsted with gasoline, and burned for several hours while fighting continued only meters away.
Soviet forces that took the complex days later identified the burned remains as Hitler and Brown through autopsy. The fate of those remains was kept as a Soviet state secret for decades. In 2019, DNA analysis of a skull fragment preserved in Moscow concluded that it belonged to a woman, not a man, reopening the debate over identification. The teeth compared with verified dental records remain the strongest available evidence.
Klaus Barbie headed the Gustapo section in Leyon between 1942 and 1944, a period in which he was responsible for the systematic torture of prisoners at the headquarters on Avenue Bertalot, the deportation of French Jews to camps in the east and the execution of members of the resistance.
Among his documented victims was Jean Mula, the principal coordinator of the French resistance, who died under torture without revealing information about his network. Barbie also ordered the deportation of 44 Jewish children who had taken refuge in the village of Izu, all under the age of 13, who were sent to Awitz. With the liberation of France, Barbie fled to Germany. He was recruited by the US Army Counter Intelligence Corps as an informant on communist networks in Europe. American intelligence services knew his identity and his record in Leon and chose to use him anyway. When French authorities began actively searching for him, the Americans organized his exfiltration to Bolivia in 1951 through a network that used Vatican documentation. He lived in La Paz under the name Klaus Altman. He was identified by investigators Serge and Beta Klasfeld who published comparative photographs proving that Altman and Barbie were the same person.
The Bolivian government took 12 years to act. In 1983, after a change of government in Bolivia, Barbie was expelled and handed over to France. The trial was held in Leon 43 years after his crimes. It was the first case in France prosecuted under the charge of crimes against humanity, a category that does not expire.
The survivors who testified were between 60 and 80 years old. Barbie was sentenced to life imprisonment. He died of leukemia in a prison in Lyon on September 25th, 1991 at the age of 77.
Declassified documents released by the US government in the 1990s confirmed that American intelligence services had actively protected a man who was simultaneously being sought by French authorities. The file remained classified for 40 years.
Gregor Strasa Strasa was for years the most effective political organizer of the National Socialist Party. While Hitler concentrated on mass speeches and the construction of the Fura myth, Strasa built the electoral machinery that turned the party into a real parliamentary force. Local membership networks, territorial propaganda structures, and mid-level cadres trained to mobilize voters in the industrial regions of northern Germany, where the anti-semitic message of the old southern guard had less resonance. In the July 1932 elections, the party reached 37% of the popular vote, becoming the strongest force in the Reichtag. Strasa was the organizational architect of that result.
His difference with Hitler was ideological in a concrete sense. The faction he represented prioritized the socialist component of the program, economic redistribution, and an alliance with sectors of the labor movement.
In December 1932, when Hitler rejected an offer from Chancellor Kurt Vonla that would have given the Nazis governmental participation without the absolute control he demanded, Strasa considered accepting it separately. The confrontation was direct. He resigned from all his positions and withdrew from politics. He did not flee, did not publish his differences, and did not seek alliances with the party's opponents. He went to work as an executive in a pharmaceutical company.
This silent withdrawal was interpreted by Hitler as evidence that Strasa did not represent an active threat and for the next 18 months the former organizer lived without police protection or visible surveillance. But Hitler's memory for humiliation had no statute of limitations.
On June 30th, 1934, during the operation that eliminated the leadership of the Sturmab Tailongan and removed various real or perceived opponents of Hitler, Gestapo agents arrested Strasa in his office. He was taken to Gestapo headquarters on Prince Alrech Strasa in Berlin. SS Chief Reinhard Heddrich gave the order directly. The process was to be immediate and leave no visible documentation. Strasa was taken to his cell and shot in the back by two SS agents. He fell to the ground with wounds that were not immediately fatal.
The explicit instructions were that no one was to enter the cell until the process had been completed.
Walter Funk Funk served as Reich Minister of Economics from 1938 and as president of the Reichs Bank from the same year until the end of the war. His role within the Reich apparatus was the management of the war economy, coordinating industrial production, managing monetary reserves, and ensuring the financing of the military effort. He was an economist by training, a financial journalist before joining the party, and his public profile was that of the technocrat who gave an appearance of institutional normality to the regime's finances. The agreement Funk signed with Hinrich Himmler was the central element of his conviction at Nuremberg.
The SS would regularly send shipments to the rice bank originating from Holocaust victims, melted gold in ingots, coins, jewelry, and dental fillings extracted from corpses in extermination camps. The Reichs Bank recorded these materials as deposits under the code name Max Hiliga and integrated them into the reserves of the German Central Bank. The system transformed the personal belongings of victims into financial assets of the German state with formal accounting and banking records. As Allied armies advanced into Germany in the final months of the war, part of these reserves was transferred to a salt mine in Murka's Theringia along with looted works of art and other Reich assets.
American troops discovered the deposit in April 1945. Among its contents were suitcases containing gold teeth, glasses, watches, and jewelry. The documentary chain linking this material to the Rice Bank and to Funk was established without ambiguity during the pre-trial investigation.
At Nuremberg, Funk stated that he was unaware of the origin of the material deposited under the name Max Hiliger.
Prosecutors screened a film shot inside the Murker's mine and presented the Reichbank's own accounting records. Funk broke down in tears during the viewing.
The tribunal considered the claim of ignorance implausible given that he had personally signed the agreement with Himmler and that the deposits appeared in the official accounts of the bank he presided over. He was sentenced to life imprisonment. He served 12 years in Spandow prison. He was released early on health grounds. He suffered from severe diabetes, circulatory problems and progressive cognitive decline. He settled in Dusseldorf where he died on May 31st, 1960 from complications of diabetes. He was 70 years old. He died in freedom in his bed in a West German city 15 years after the end of the war.
Ernst Rome Rome founded the Sturmabt Tylingan in the early years of the movement turning unemployed veterans of the great war and young men without prospects in the VHimar Republic into the shock force that made the party's street intimidation tactics possible. By 1934, the Sturmab Tailongan had nearly 3 million members, far exceeding the size of the German professional army, the Rice, which under the Treaty of Versailles was limited to 100,000 soldiers. R was the only member of Hitler's inner circle who addressed him informally, a consequence of years of camaraderie that predated the party's rise to power. His political program was the second revolution, transforming German capitalism, integrating the Abdilongan into a people's military force, and completing the social revolution that the party's rhetoric had promised. This program was incompatible with the consolidation of the regime, which required the cooperation of the professional army and the industrial elite. The German military leadership had made it clear to Hitler that their support depended on reducing the sturmab tailongan to a ceremonial role.
Eliminating Rome was the price of that alliance and President Hindenburg whose imminent death would leave the head of state position vacant was part of the same equation. In the end, he was given a loaded pistol in his cell with the message that he had 10 minutes to use it. Rome refused. He demanded that if they were going to kill him, Hitler should do it personally. The time passed without a shot being fired in the cell.
Two SS officers entered and shot him.
Rome died on the floor of his cell.
Official reports described his death as resistance to arrest. Alfred Yodel Yodel directed the operations of the armed forces high command throughout the entire war, serving as the officer responsible for translating Hitler's strategic directives into operational orders. This role made him co-responsible for decisions with direct consequences for civilian populations.
The commissar order which mandated the immediate execution of captured Soviet political commisars and the night and fog decree which ordered the disappearance of individuals in occupied territories without notification to their families bore his signature. In his defense, he argued that he merely transmitted Hitler's decisions and that responsibility lay with the originator of the orders, not the executive.
On May 7th, 1945, he signed the unconditional surrender of all German armed forces in rhymes. His final words at the ceremony were that with his signature, he was delivering the German people into the mercy of the victors. He was arrested weeks later. At Nuremberg, he maintained the position of a professional soldier acting under a command system that left no room for disobedience.
Prosecutors presented specific documents showing that Jodel had endorsed certain orders rather than merely transmitting them. He was sentenced to death for crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity.
His last words before stepping onto the gallows were a salute to Germany. The execution took place on October 16th, 1946. Yodel died on the gallows without the prolonged physical distress that affected Kitle and Ribbentrop. Although medical reports from that night were not entirely consistent regarding the exact times of death of all those executed.
Wilhelm Canaris Canaris headed the AB, the military intelligence service of the armed forces high command from 1935 until February 1944. The paradox of his career was that he used this apparatus to protect German Jews, maintain channels with British intelligence services, and provide cover for internal resistance conspirators. His opposition to the regime was pragmatic. He understood early that the war could not be won, and that the policies of extermination were committing Germany to crimes that made any negotiated peace impossible. The Reich main security office had long distrusted him for reasons that went beyond institutional rivalry. the wellfounded suspicion that the head of military intelligence was a source of leaks to the enemy. In February 1944, the ABV was dissolved and absorbed into the RSHA.
The July 20th 1944 assassination attempt on Hitler triggered the most extensive investigation in the regime's history.
The interrogations led investigators toward Canaris. He was arrested, held in several detention centers, and subjected for months to interrogations alternating with periods of progressive physical deterioration.
In the first days of April 1945, with Allied Armies only days away, the SS Supreme Court held an emergency trial for camp prisoners, an accelerated review of cases in order to issue sentences before the Allies arrived.
On April 9th, 1945, Canaris was taken to the execution site of the camp naked, following the humiliating protocol the SS applied to those they considered traitors. He was hanged along with several other members of the resistance that same morning. He was 58 years old.
Allied forces liberated Flossenberg 15 days later.
Robert Lie Lei controlled the German labor front from 1933. The organization that replaced independent trade unions dissolved after Hitler came to power.
With more than 20 million members, it was the largest mass organization in the Reich. Lei used its resources to build the Craft Dirt Freder program, Strength through Joy, which offered vacations and consumer goods to workers as a mechanism of political integration and to suppress any independent labor movement. Le's alcohol consumption was known within the inner circle and documented in contemporary diaries. The condition was tolerated because his control over the German labor front made him politically indispensable. He was captured in May 1945 near the Austrian border. The charges against him at Nuremberg included the use of forced labor and the destruction of European trade union movements. Unlike other defendants who used the period before the trial to prepare legal strategies, Lei showed signs of progressive psychological disintegration. His statements to examiners alternated between incoherence and bursts of rationalization that appeared disconnected from the reality of the proceedings being prepared against him. On October 25th, 1945, the night before the formal reading of the indictments that would officially begin the trial, Lelay was found dead in his cell at Nuremberg Prison. He had hanged himself using a towel torn into strips and tied to the toilet pipe. The prison surveillance system, which included periodic checks to prevent exactly this type of incident, did not detect it in time. Albert Spear.
Shar was Hitler's favorite architect before becoming the most competent minister in his cabinet. He had designed the monumental settings of the Nuremberg rallies and the new Reich Chancellery.
His relationship with Hitler was one of the few within the inner circle that contained a genuine aesthetic dimension.
They shared a vision of architecture as an instrument of symbolic power. In February 1942, after the death of Fritz Tot in a plane crash, Spear assumed the Ministry of Armaments and War Production. In that role, he demonstrated extraordinary organizational ability. At a time when the war was consuming resources faster than Germany could produce them, he reorganized the armaments industry, increasing the production of tanks, aircraft, and ammunition by percentages that Allied economists considered impossible given the state of the Reich.
German armaments production reached its peak in 1944, the year in which the front began to collapse definitively.
This production was made possible in part through the systematic use of forced labor. Millions of workers from occupied territories, Soviet prisoners of war, and concentration camp detainees were employed in the armament's industry under conditions that produced documented rates of labor mortality.
The minister oversaw this structure without ideologically designing it, but also without operationally ignoring it.
At Nuremberg, Spear constructed the most sophisticated defense of all the major defendants. He presented himself as the good Nazi, the technocrat who had served the regime without adhering to its racial ideology. He claimed not to have known about the Holocaust in terms of its concrete implementation.
The tribunal considered this claim implausible, but not refutable beyond reasonable doubt based on the available evidence. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison instead of death by hanging.
the result of both his courtroom strategy and the available evidence. He served the full sentence in Spandow and was released in 1966. He died on September 1st, 1981 in London where he had traveled for a television interview of a stroke. He was 76 years old. He was the only top level member of Hitler's cabinet to die of natural causes in freedom with a reputation sufficiently rehabilitated to appear on television.
Baldur vonak vonirak organized the Hitler youth from 1931 transforming a marginal paramilitary organization into a compulsory ideological training system for all German youth summer camps ideological instruction premilitary preparation and the construction of a collective identity that displaced family and religious loyalty in favor of the state and the furer. By 1937, membership was virtually universal among German boys between the ages of 10 and 18. He was appointed goliter and Reich governor of Vienna, a position he held until the end of the war. In that role, he oversaw the deportation of more than 60,000 vianese Jews to camps in the east, an operation coordinated with the Reich main security office and which he himself described in internal communications as a contribution to the Reich's racial policy. In a meeting with Hitler, he expressed concern about the conditions of the deportations. Not the deportations themselves, but their impact on Germany's image among non-German European populations. Hitler responded coldly and their relationship deteriorated.
He surrendered voluntarily to American forces in May 1945. At Nuremberg, he chose to publicly distance himself from Hitler, describing the regime as a system that had manipulated his youthful idealism.
The tribunal acknowledged the gesture but considered it insufficient to alter the established finding of guilt regarding the deportations. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He served the full sentence in Spandow sharing a cell with Rudolph Hess for years and was released on the same day as Spear.
After his release, he lived in retirement in Bavaria without participating in public activities related to the Nazi period. He died on August 8th, 1974 of a coronary thrombosis at the age of 67 in Krv, a small village on the Moselle River.
Arthur Cis inquort.
Zeissing Court had opened the door to the annexation of Austria as minister of the interior, formerly inviting German troops to enter the country. That act earned him successive positions of lesser importance until he was appointed Reich Commissioner for the Netherlands, the role that would define his history and his sentence. From that position, he administered a territory of 9 million people, combining the systematic economic extraction of the country with the supervision of the deportation of Dutch Jews. and he presided over one of the most severe famines in Western Europe when he blocked food transport into the cities as retaliation for a railway workers strike in the winter of 1944 to 1945.
Of the 140,000 Jews living in the Netherlands at the start of the occupation, more than 107,000 were deported to camps in the east, one of the highest rates in occupied Western Europe. Anne Frank's family was deported through the system he supervised. The famine of the winter of 1944 to 1945, known as the Hunger Winter, killed between 18,000 and 22,000 Dutch civilians as a direct consequence of the food blockade he ordered in retaliation for a railway strike. Negotiations with the Allies and the Red Cross to allow food deliveries progressed slowly, becoming an instrument of political bargaining over the pace of surrender.
He was captured by British troops in Hamburg. At Nuremberg, he attempted to argue that he had tried to mitigate some of the more extreme effects of the occupation and that his final negotiations with the Allies had saved lives. Documents from his own administration presented as evidence showed the chain of decisions on deportations and food blockades bearing his signature. He was found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced to death. He was executed on October 16th, 1946. His final words were, "I hope that this will be the last act in the tragedy of the Second World War and that the lesson learned from this war will be peace and understanding among peoples. I believe in Germany."
The execution was reported by observers as having no particular incident unlike several others that same night.
Fritz Socl was appointed general planetentiary for labor deployment in March 1942 with the mandate of supplying workers for the German armaments industry in the quantities required by spear's ministry.
Over the following 3 years, Sul organized the forced transfer of approximately 5 million foreign workers to Germany drawn from occupied Soviet territories, France, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy, Yugoslavia, and other occupied or allied European nations.
The mechanism varied by territory. In Western Europe, it began with so-called voluntary quotas that were not met, after which sul shifted to raids, the detention of working age men, and transport under armed guard. In the Soviet territories, coercive methods were used from the very first day. At Nuremberg, he argued that the treatment had been fair and that inhumane conditions were isolated exceptions not representative of the system.
Prosecutors presented hundreds of documents from his own administration describing coercive quotas and detention methods that contradicted this narrative point by point. The tribunal held that forced labor organized under his authority constituted slavery under international law and that evidence of his knowledge of the conditions was undeniable. He was sentenced to death and executed on October 16th, 1946.
Hansf Frank Frank administered the government general of occupied Poland. A lawyer by training, he had represented the Nazi party in legal proceedings during the Bimmer Republic. His territorial jurisdiction included the extermination camps of Trebinka, soore, Belzac, and Chelno, and the Avitz Birkanau complex operated just a few dozen kilometers beyond its border. More than 3 million Polish Jews were eliminated in the camps that depended on the logistics of the government general. Frank kept diaries throughout his years in power. Detailed diaries regularly updated describing meetings, decisions, conversations with members of the high command, his perspective on the course of the war, and his position within the Reich apparatus. When the Soviet armies advanced toward Kraov, Frank fled westward, taking the diaries with him.
He was captured by American troops in Bavaria in May 1945 with the diaries in his possession. 38 volumes. The Nuremberg prosecution team reviewed their contents and found descriptions of meetings where the extermination policy was discussed, direct references to deportations, execution figures, and documentation of the destruction process of the Jewish population of the government general in a level of detail no prosecutor could have obtained otherwise.
Frank had written the evidence against himself over 5 years and personally carried it to the place where he would be tried. He was sentenced to death and executed on October 16th, 1946. He climbed the scaffold after receiving the sacraments and with an expression described by observers as serene. His final words thanked God for the opportunity of repentance and asked for mercy for the Polish victims of his administration.
Francis Eva Schwarz. He was the treasurer of the National Socialist German Workers Party for exactly two decades. A period that spanned the years of opposition, the rise to power, the transformation of the party into a state parallel structure and the war. His position was not one that appeared in news reels or mass speeches, but without it, none of the other party structures could function. Schwarz managed membership fees, campaign funds, the budgets of subordinate organizations, party properties acquired during the years of expansion, and the accounting of an organization that by 1938 was financially more powerful than several ministries of the German state.
Discretion was his defining trait. In a party of figures competing for visibility and access, he built his influence on being indispensable yet invisible. Regional Gowiters, the Hitler Youth, the German Labor Front, and the Slees ultimately depended on the central accounting that passed through his office in Munich. Captured by American forces at the end of the war, he was not included among the main defendants at Nuremberg. In the internment camp to which he was transferred, Schwarz's health deteriorated progressively. He had arrived with pre-existing stomach problems that worsened under internment conditions. He died on December 2nd, 1947 of complications related to his digestive illness. He was 72 years old.
He was not tried, not executed, not lost in the chaos of battle. He died in an internment camp from stomach disease 2 years after the end of the war without ever answering before any tribunal for 20 years of financial administration of the organization that financed the rise of Nazism. His death was the most silent and the most anonymous of them all.
Joseph Mangala.
Mangala was the physician who conducted the selection process on the ramp at Ashvitz Burkanau. The movement of his hand determined who was sent directly to the gas chambers and who was registered as labor. In parallel, he carried out experiments on prisoners, particularly twins, subjecting them to surgical procedures without anesthesia, injections of various substances, and mutilations with the declared aim of researching the genetics of heredity.
The survivors of these experiments became the most direct witnesses of his activity in the camp. With the evacuation of Awitz in January 1945, Mangala moved westward with the SS columns. He was briefly detained by Allied forces but released because his name did not yet appear on wanted criminal lists. He returned to Germany, worked as a farmer under a false name, and in 1949 sailed to Argentina using international Red Cross documentation obtained under the name Helmet Gregor.
He lived in Buenosiris for several years in relative normality, eventually obtained legal Argentine documentation under his real name, and briefly traveled to Europe.
When in 1960 the Mossad captured Aishikman in Buenosiris, Mangal understood that Argentina was no longer safe and moved to Paraguay where he obtained citizenship.
Years later, he settled in Brazil on a farm in the state of Sa Paulo where he lived under successive identities with financial support from his family in Gunsburg and networks of former Reich members.
Israeli, German, and American intelligence services maintained active files on his whereabouts for decades. On multiple occasions, investigators came within days of locating him without succeeding. Mangala was aware that he was being hunted and regularly changed residents within Brazil. His health deteriorated. He suffered from depression and arthritis. and his letters from this period, preserved by his family, show a man who alternated between self-pity and an absolute refusal to acknowledge responsibility for what he had done at Awitz. On February 4th, 1979, while swimming at a beach in Bertoga near Santos, Mangal suffered a stroke and drowned. He was buried in a local cemetery under the name Wolf Gang Ghard, an identity he had used in his final years. His remains were exumed in 1985 and identified through forensic analysis. DNA testing conducted in 1992 using samples from his relatives confirmed the identification definitively. He had lived 34 years after the end of the war without ever answering before any tribunal.
Yakim von Ribbentrop.
He became minister of foreign affairs of the Reich in 1938 without formal diplomatic experience to the contempt of the professional diplomatic corps and with a single real qualification unconditional loyalty to Hitler. The Molotov Ribbentrop Pact of August 1939, the non-aggression treaty between Germany and the Soviet Union that included secret protocols for the division of Poland and the Baltic states was his greatest diplomatic achievement and also the agreement that Hitler invalidated 2 years later by invading the Soviet Union without consulting him.
From June 1941 onward, his role in German foreign policy became progressively marginal because that policy was essentially military in nature and he had no influence over it.
He was captured in Hamburg in June 1945 living under the false name Rise in the room of an acquaintance. He carried no elaborate escape documentation and had not integrated into any exfiltration network. His arrest was almost accidental. Someone who knew him recognized him and notified the British occupation authorities. At Nuremberg, he was the defendant who most clearly demonstrated a lack of understanding of the scope of the charges. His answers alternated between self-pity, denial of responsibility, and the assertion that he had merely carried out Hitler's instructions. He was sentenced to death for active participation in the planning of wars of aggression, and in policies that constituted crimes against humanity. On October 16th, 1946, Ribbentrop was the first of the 10 condemned men to ascend the scaffold.
His execution lasted 14 minutes. The same technical problem that affected Kitle, the reduced size of the trapoor, which limited the length of the drop, resulted in asphixxiation rather than cervical fracture. The journalists present, including the Associated Press correspondent, documented the process.
Wilhelmf Frick.
Frick was the minister of the interior of the Reich from 1933 to 1943.
In that role, he drafted and introduced the Nuremberg laws, the legislative framework that defined German citizenship in racial terms, stripped German Jews of citizenship, and prohibited marriage and sexual relations between Jews and non-Jews. His ministry extended this legislation to annexed and occupied territories and also managed the processes of forced sterilization under the law for the prevention of hereditarily diseased offspring. More than 400,000 people were forcibly sterilized within the legal framework he administered.
In 1943, he was removed from office and appointed Reich protector for Bohemia and Moravia, a position that in practice functioned as an honorary retirement within the hierarchy. He was captured at the end of the war without major incident. At Nuremberg, the evidence against Frick was based largely on the legal documents he himself had drafted and signed, public texts that required no additional testimony to establish his role. The defense did not deny authorship of the legislation, but argued that these were sovereign legislative acts of a recognized state, an argument the tribunal rejected. He was sentenced to death and executed on October 16th, 1946.
His execution was defective. The calculation of the drop caused his head to strike the edge of the trapoor in addition to an incomplete drop, and the process was considered by the attending doctors to be prolonged. Observers reports were not uniform regarding the exact sequence, but Frick's execution was one of those cited in later investigations into the functioning of the Nuremberg gallows that night. If there was something you didn't know before watching this today, subscribe and turn on the bell. It's the best way to support us so we can keep bringing you documentaries like this.
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