This video recounts a World War II incident where General George Patton confronted German sergeant Dietrich Mueller, who had placed six American soldiers' dog tags on his dog's collar as a joke. Patton employed psychological pressure by informing Mueller that all six families had been contacted and would learn of his actions, warning that Mueller would face a war crimes tribunal with permanent records. After two days of starvation, Mueller wrote six apology letters to the families, demonstrating that accountability and the threat of consequences can motivate individuals to acknowledge wrongdoing and seek forgiveness, even from those they considered enemies.
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What Patton Did When He Found a German Using American Dog Tags as His Actual Dog's CollarHinzugefügt:
May 1945, southern Germany, a P processing camp.
The war was over. Germany had surrendered. Two weeks earlier, General Patton was inspecting a prisoner holding facility near Munich. Thousands of German soldiers waiting for processing, waiting for transport to permanent camps. Most were vermocked, regular army, some SS mixed in. Patton was walking through the compound. Rows of prisoners sitting on the ground.
American guards watching them. Then Patton heard something barking. He stopped, looked around. There was a dog in the prisoner area. A German Shepherd, big, well-fed, healthy. It was with one of the prisoners, a German sergeant sitting on the ground. The dog lying beside him. Patton walked closer. The American guard corporal noticed the general coming. Snapped to attention.
Sir. Patton didn't return. The salute.
He was looking at the dog. Corporal, why is there a dog in the prisoner compound?
The corporal looked at the German Shepherd. Sir, the prisoner said, "It's his dog. He wouldn't surrender without it. We let him keep it." Patton stared at the dog. Something about it caught his attention. Around the dog's neck, there was a collar, but not a normal collar. It was made of metal. Tags strung together on a chain patent bent down closer. The tags were stamped with names, service, numbers, blood, types, American dog tags. Six of them strung together around the dog's neck. Six American soldiers dead. And this German had taken their identification tags and put them on his dog. Literal dog tags on an actual dog. Patton stood up slowly.
He looked at the German sergeant. The man was watching the general. No fear in his eyes, just casual indifference.
Patton turned to the corporal. "Get the camp commander here now." The corporal ran. Patton looked back at the dog at the six American names hanging around its neck. Then he looked at the German and said something that would be repeated throughout the Third Army for weeks. Before we continue, make sure you subscribe. We tell the stories of World War II where sometimes evil was so casual it wore a collar. The camp commander was Colonel James Reynolds.
He'd been running this facility for 3 weeks, processing thousands of German prisoners every day. He arrived at a run, saw Patton standing over a German prisoner and a dog. Reynolds saluted.
Sir Patton pointed at the dog. Colonel, look at that collar. Reynolds bent down, looked. His face went white. Jesus Christ. Are those American dog tags?
Yes. Reynolds straightened, looked at the German sergeant, then back at Patton. Sir, we didn't know. We let him keep the dog. He said it was his pet. We thought it was harmless. Patton turned to the corporal. Corporal, get me.
Someone who speaks German now. Within 2 minutes, private Anton Weber arrived. He was a German American translator from Milwaukee. Weber looked at the dog at the collar. His jaw tightened. Patton spoke quietly. Private. Ask him his name. Weber spoke in German. The prisoner answered calmly. His name is Sergeant Dietrich Mueller Weirmock, Infantry, 352nd Division. Ask him where he got the dog tags. Weber asked.
Mueller answered without hesitation.
Weber's voice was tight as he translated. He says he collected them from battlefields over the past two years, France and Germany. Patton looked at Müller. Ask him why he put them on the dog. Weber asked. Mueller shrugged, answered casually. Weber hesitated before translating. Sir, he says, he says they're called dog tags, so he put them on his dog. He thinks it's funny.
The silence that followed was absolute.
Every American soldier within earshot had stopped moving. They were all staring at Mueller, at the dog, at the six American names hanging around its neck. Patton's voice was quiet.
Dangerously quiet. He thinks it's funny.
He bent down closer to Mueller. Tell him. I want to know the names on those tags. Weber translated. Mueller pointed at the dog recited from memory without looking. Private Robert Jennings, Ohio.
Private Michael Sully, New York.
Corporal Thomas Bridges, Texas. Private James Williams, California. Sergeant Daniel O'Brien, Massachusetts. Private Charles Anderson, Illinois. He knew them all by heart. Patton straightened. He memorized their names. Weber asked Muller something else in German. Mhler nodded. Answered. Weber turned to Patton. Sir, he says he's had the dog for 3 years. He started the collar 2 years ago. He adds a tag each time he finds one. He says his dog deserves the best collar. Patton stared at Mueller for a long moment. Then he turned to Reynolds. Colonel, take the dog. Remove the tags carefully. Each one gets documented. Name, service number, everything. Reynolds nodded, gestured to two guards. They approached the dog.
Müller started to protest. In German, Patton, cut him off. Tell him he doesn't get to object. Abull. The guards took the dog. Let it away. The German Shepherd looked back at Mueller, confused. Mueller watched his dog go for the first time. His face showed emotion, not shame, anger. Patton watched Mueller carefully. He's not sorry about the Americans. He's angry about the dog. He turned back to Reynolds. Colonel, I want this man in isolation, no contact with other prisoners. And I want every one of those six names run through missing person's records. I want to know who they were, where they died, if they have families back home. Reynolds nodded.
Yes, sir. Y Patton looked at Mueller.
One more time and colonel. This man will be writing letters. Reynolds looked confused. Sir, six letters, one to each family. He's going to tell them what he did with their son's dog tag and he's going to apologize in his own hand in German. We'll translate and send them.
Reynolds hesitated. Sir, what if? He refuses. Patton's voice went even quieter. Then he doesn't eat until he writes them. He turned to Weber.
Private, tell him what I just said. Make sure he understands. Weber translated.
Mueller's face hardened. He spoke back in German. Defiant. Weber translated. He says he won't do it. He says the Americans were enemies. He owes them nothing. Patton nodded slowly. Then he doesn't eat. Starting now. He looked at Reynolds. Put him in a cell by himself.
No food, water, only paper, pen, and ink. He can come out when he's written.
Six letters full. Apologies to six families. Reynolds gestured to the guards. They pulled Mueller to his feet, began leading him away. Mueller shouted something in German. Weber didn't translate at first. Patton looked at him. What did he say? Weber hesitated.
Sir, he said he'll starve before he writes to American families. Patton watched Mueller being led away. We'll see. Two days passed. Mueller refused to write. He sat in his cell paper and pen in front of him untouched. The guards brought water, nothing else. I On the third day, Patton visited the cell.
Mueller was sitting on the floor, thinner, weaker, but still defiant.
Patton stood outside the bars. Weber beside him asked him if he's ready to write. Weber asked. Mueller shook his head. spoke in German. Weber translated.
He says no. He says he'd rather die.
Patton nodded. Tell him that's his choice. But tell him this. I've contacted all six families. They know what he did. They know their sons. Dog tag was on a dog's collar for 2 years.
Weber translated Mueller looked up surprised. Patton continued, >> "Tell him I sent them photographs of the collar, of the tags of him, and I told them he refuses to apologize that he's starving rather than write."
>> Weber translated Muller's face showed something new. Uncertainty. Patton bent down closer to the bars. Tell him those families will live the rest of their lives knowing what he did to their son's name, to their memory, and they'll know.
He thought it was funny. Weber translated. Mhler looked down at the paper, at his hands. Patton stood up.
Tell him the letters won't change what he did, but they might let those families sleep at night. Knowing he at least acknowledged it was wrong, he turned to leave, stopped, looked back, tell him he has until tomorrow morning.
After that, he gets transferred to a war crimes tribunal where what he did will be part of his record, permanent. Patton left. The next morning, when the guards checked Mueller's cell, six pages of paper were on the floor, written in German. handwriting shaky from hunger but readable. Six letters, one for each family. Reynolds brought them to Patton.
Patton read the translations. They were brief, awkward, but they were apologies.
I took your son's dog tag from the battlefield. I put it on my dog's collar. This was wrong. I am sorry. Six times the same words. Six different names. Patton looked at Reynolds. Send them all six families. They deserve to know. What about Mueller, sir? Patton thought for a moment. Feed him, then transfer him to a permanent camp. Make sure his record shows what he did, and that he refused to apologize for 2 days.
And the dog, Sir Patton, looked at the six dog tags, now cleaned, documented, separated. The dog goes to a local family, a good one. The tags go home to America. To the families, if they want them, Reynolds nodded. Patton picked up one of the tags. Private Robert Jennings, Ohio. These men died fighting for their country. Their names deserve better than a dog's collar. He put the tag down gently. Make sure they get that. Four of the six families wanted the tags returned. They were sent home with full military honors escorts. Two families asked that the tags be buried at Arlington National Cemetery in the tomb of the unknown soldier memorial area. They were the story of Mueller and the dog tags spread through the Third Army. Within days, other prisoners heard it. Some who' done similar things quietly turned over. Dog tags, medals, personal items they'd taken from American dead. They didn't want Patton's attention. Years later, one of the six families, Private Charles Anderson's sister, was interviewed for a local Ohio newspaper. She said, "We got the letter from the German who put my brother's name on his dog. We burned it. We didn't want his apology, but we got the dog tag back. General Patton sent it himself with a note saying, "Your brother deserved better. We keep it in a frame next to Charles photo that we kept."
Mueller survived. The war was released from P camp in 1947.
He returned to Germany.
He never spoke publicly about what he'd done, but his record followed him every job application, every interaction with former soldiers. Everyone knew the man who put Americans on his dog. Literal dog tags on an actual dog. And the general who made him apologize. What would you have done if you'd been patent that day? Would you have starved him longer or shown mercy sooner? Let us know in the comments. And if you want more stories about the moments when evil met justice, subscribe.
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