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Wikipedia

Gestapo

The Geheime Staatspolizei (transl. Secret State Police), abbreviated Gestapo (German: [ɡəˈʃtaːpo]; /ɡəˈstɑːp/),[3] was the official secret police of Nazi Germany and in German-occupied Europe.

Gestapo
Geheime Staatspolizei

Gestapo headquarters at 8 Prinz Albrecht Street in Berlin (1933)
Agency overview
Formed26 April 1933 (1933-04-26)
Preceding agency
Dissolved8 May 1945 (1945-05-08)
TypeSecret police
JurisdictionGermany and Occupied Europe
HeadquartersPrinz-Albrecht-Straße 8, Berlin
52°30′25″N 13°22′58″E / 52.50694°N 13.38278°E / 52.50694; 13.38278
Employees32,000 (1944 est.)[1]
Ministers responsible
Agency executives
Parent agencyAllgemeine SS
RSHA
Sicherheitspolizei

The force was created by Hermann Göring in 1933 by combining the various political police agencies of Prussia into one organisation. On 20 April 1934, oversight of the Gestapo passed to the head of the Schutzstaffel (SS), Heinrich Himmler, who was also appointed Chief of German Police by Hitler in 1936. Instead of being exclusively a Prussian state agency, the Gestapo became a national one as a sub-office of the Sicherheitspolizei (SiPo; Security Police). From 27 September 1939, it was administered by the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA). It became known as Amt (Dept) 4 of the RSHA and was considered a sister organisation to the Sicherheitsdienst (SD; Security Service). During World War II, the Gestapo played a key role in the Holocaust. After the war ended, the Gestapo was declared a criminal organisation by the International Military Tribunal (IMT) at the Nuremberg trials.

History

After Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany, Hermann Göring—future commander of the Luftwaffe and the number two man in the Nazi Party—was named Interior Minister of Prussia.[4] This gave Göring command of the largest police force in Germany. Soon afterward, Göring detached the political and intelligence sections from the police and filled their ranks with Nazis. On 26 April 1933, Göring merged the two units as the Geheime Staatspolizei, which was abbreviated by a post office clerk for a franking stamp and became known as the "Gestapo".[5][6] He originally wanted to name it the Secret Police Office (Geheimes Polizeiamt), but the German initials, "GPA", were too similar to those of the Soviet State Political Directorate (Gosudarstvennoye Politicheskoye Upravlenie, or GPU).[7]

 
Rudolf Diels, first Commander of the Gestapo; 1933–1934
 
Heinrich Himmler and Hermann Göring at the meeting to formally hand over control of the Gestapo (Berlin, 1934).

The first commander of the Gestapo was Rudolf Diels, a protégé of Göring. Diels was appointed with the title of chief of Abteilung Ia (Department 1a) of the Prussian Secret Police.[8] Diels was best known as the primary interrogator of Marinus van der Lubbe after the Reichstag fire. In late 1933, the Reich Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick wanted to integrate all the police forces of the German states under his control. Göring outflanked him by removing the Prussian political and intelligence departments from the state interior ministry.[9] Göring took over the Gestapo in 1934 and urged Hitler to extend the agency's authority throughout Germany. This represented a radical departure from German tradition, which held that law enforcement was (mostly) a Land (state) and local matter. In this, he ran into conflict with Schutzstaffel (SS) chief Heinrich Himmler who was police chief of the second most powerful German state, Bavaria. Frick did not have the political power to take on Göring by himself so he allied with Himmler. With Frick's support, Himmler (pushed on by his right-hand man, Reinhard Heydrich) took over the political police in state-after-state. Soon only Prussia was left.[10]

Concerned that Diels was not ruthless enough to effectively counteract the power of the Sturmabteilung (SA), Göring handed over control of the Gestapo to Himmler on 20 April 1934.[11] Also on that date, Hitler appointed Himmler chief of all German police outside Prussia. Heydrich, named chief of the Gestapo by Himmler on 22 April 1934, also continued as head of the SS Security Service (Sicherheitsdienst; SD).[12] Himmler and Heydrich both immediately began installing their own personnel in select positions, several of whom were directly from the Bavarian Political Police, such as Heinrich Müller, Franz Josef Huber and Josef Meisinger.[13] Many of the Gestapo employees in the newly established offices were young and highly educated in a wide variety of academic fields and moreover, represented a new generation of National Socialist adherents, who were hard-working, efficient, and prepared to carry the Nazi state forward through the persecution of their political opponents.[14]

By the spring of 1934, Himmler's SS controlled the SD and the Gestapo, but for him, there was still a problem, as technically the SS (and the Gestapo by proxy) was subordinated to the SA, which was under the command of Ernst Röhm.[15] Himmler wanted to free himself entirely from Röhm, whom he viewed as an obstacle.[16] Röhm's position was menacing as more than 4.5 million men fell under his command once the militias and veterans organisations were absorbed by the SA,[17] a fact which fuelled Röhm's aspirations; his dream of fusing the SA and Reichswehr together was undermining Hitler's relationships with the leadership of Germany's armed forces.[18] Several Nazi chieftains, among them Göring, Joseph Goebbels, Rudolf Hess, and Himmler, began a concerted campaign to convince Hitler to take action against Röhm.[19] Both the SD and Gestapo released information concerning an imminent putsch by the SA.[20] Once persuaded, Hitler acted by setting Himmler's SS into action, who then proceeded to murder over 100 of Hitler's identified antagonists. The Gestapo supplied the information which implicated the SA and ultimately enabled Himmler and Heydrich to emancipate themselves entirely from the organisation.[21] For the Gestapo, the next two years following the Night of the Long Knives, a term describing the putsch against Röhm and the SA, were characterised by "behind-the-scenes political wrangling over policing".[22]

 
1938 Gestapo border inspection stamp applied when leaving Germany.

On 17 June 1936, Hitler decreed the unification of all police forces in Germany and named Himmler as Chief of German Police.[23] This action effectively merged the police into the SS and removed it from Frick's control. Himmler was nominally subordinate to Frick as police chief, but as Reichsführer-SS, he answered only to Hitler. This move also gave Himmler operational control over Germany's entire detective force.[24] The Gestapo became a national state agency. Himmler also gained authority over all of Germany's uniformed law enforcement agencies, which were amalgamated into the new Ordnungspolizei (Orpo; Order Police), which became a national agency under SS general Kurt Daluege.[23] Shortly thereafter, Himmler created the Kriminalpolizei (Kripo; Criminal Police), merging it with the Gestapo into the Sicherheitspolizei (SiPo; Security Police), under Heydrich's command.[25] Heinrich Müller was at that time the Gestapo operations chief.[26] He answered to Heydrich, Heydrich answered only to Himmler, and Himmler answered only to Hitler.[23]

The Gestapo had the authority to investigate cases of treason, espionage, sabotage and criminal attacks on the Nazi Party and Germany. The basic Gestapo law passed by the government in 1936 gave the Gestapo carte blanche to operate without judicial review—in effect, putting it above the law.[27] The Gestapo was specifically exempted from responsibility to administrative courts, where citizens normally could sue the state to conform to laws. As early as 1935, a Prussian administrative court had ruled that the Gestapo's actions were not subject to judicial review. The SS officer Werner Best, one-time head of legal affairs in the Gestapo,[28] summed up this policy by saying, "As long as the police carries out the will of the leadership, it is acting legally".[29]

On 27 September 1939, the security and police agencies of Nazi Germany—with the exception of the Order Police—were consolidated into the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA), headed by Heydrich.[30] The Gestapo became Amt IV (Department IV) of RSHA and Müller became the Gestapo Chief, with Heydrich as his immediate superior.[31] After Heydrich's 1942 assassination, Himmler assumed the leadership of the RSHA until January 1943, when Ernst Kaltenbrunner was appointed chief.[32] Müller remained the Gestapo Chief. His direct subordinate Adolf Eichmann headed the Gestapo's Office of Resettlement and then its Office of Jewish Affairs (Referat IV B4 or Sub-Department IV, Section B4).[33] During the Holocaust, Eichmann's department within the Gestapo coordinated the mass deportation of European Jews to the Nazis' extermination camps.

The power of the Gestapo included the use of what was called, Schutzhaft—"protective custody", a euphemism for the power to imprison people without judicial proceedings.[34] An oddity of the system was that the prisoner had to sign his own Schutzhaftbefehl, an order declaring that the person had requested imprisonment—presumably out of fear of personal harm. In addition, political prisoners throughout Germany—and from 1941, throughout the occupied territories under the Night and Fog Decree (German: Nacht und Nebel)—simply disappeared while in Gestapo custody.[35] Up to 30 April 1944, at least 6,639 persons were arrested under Nacht und Nebel orders.[36] However, the total number of people who disappeared as a result of this decree is not known.[37]

Counterintelligence

The Polish government in exile in London during World War II received sensitive military information about Nazi Germany from agents and informants throughout Europe. After Germany conquered Poland (in the autumn of 1939), Gestapo officials believed that they had neutralised Polish intelligence activities. However, certain Polish information about the movement of German police and SS units to the East during 1941 German invasion of the Soviet Union was similar to information British intelligence secretly obtained through intercepting and decoding German police and SS messages sent by radio telegraphy.[38]

In 1942, the Gestapo discovered a cache of Polish intelligence documents in Prague and were surprised to see that Polish agents and informants had been gathering detailed military information and smuggling it out to London, via Budapest and Istanbul. The Poles identified and tracked German military trains to the Eastern front and identified four Order Police battalions sent to occupied areas of the Soviet Union in October 1941 that engaged in war crimes and mass murder.[39]

Polish agents also gathered detailed information about the morale of German soldiers in the East. After uncovering a sample of the information the Poles had reported, Gestapo officials concluded that Polish intelligence activity represented a very serious danger to Germany. As late as 6 June 1944, Heinrich Müller—concerned about the leakage of information to the Allies—set up a special unit called Sonderkommando Jerzy that was meant to root out the Polish intelligence network in western and southwestern Europe.[40]

In Austria, there were groups still loyal to the Habsburgs, who unlike most across the Greater German Reich, remained determined to resist the Nazis. These groups became a special focus of the Gestapo because of their insurrectionist goals—the overthrow of the Nazi regime, the re-establishment of an independent Austria under Habsburg leadership—and Hitler's hatred of the Habsburg family. Hitler vehemently rejected the centuries' old Habsburg pluralist principles of "live and let live" with regard to ethnic groups, peoples, minorities, religions, cultures and languages.[41] Habsburg loyalist Karl Burian's (who was later executed) plan to blow up the Gestapo headquarters in Vienna represented a unique attempt to act aggressively against the Gestapo. Burian's group had also set up a secret courier service to Otto von Habsburg in Belgium. Individuals in Austrian resistance groups led by Heinrich Maier also managed to pass along the plans and the location of production facilities for V-1, V-2 rockets, Tiger tanks, and aircraft (Messerschmitt Bf 109, Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet, etc.) to the Allies.[42] The Maier group informed very early about the mass murder of Jews. The resistance group, later discovered by the Gestapo because of a double agent of the Abwehr, was in contact with Allen Dulles, the head of the US Office of Strategic Services in Switzerland. Although Maier and the other group members were severely tortured, the Gestapo did not uncover the essential involvement of the resistance group in Operation Crossbow and Operation Hydra.[43][44][a]

Suppression of resistance and persecution

Early in the regime's existence, harsh measures were meted out to political opponents and those who resisted Nazi doctrine, such as members of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD); a role originally performed by the SA until the SD and Gestapo undermined their influence and took control of Reich security.[45] Because the Gestapo seemed omniscient and omnipotent, the atmosphere of fear they created led to an overestimation of their reach and strength; a faulty assessment which hampered the operational effectiveness of underground resistance organisations.[46]

Trade unions

Shortly after the Nazis came to power, they decided to dissolve the 28 federations of the General German Trade Union Confederation, because Hitler—after noting their success in the works council elections—intended to consolidate all German workers under the Nazi government's administration, a decision he made on 7 April 1933.[47] As a preface to this action, Hitler decreed May 1 as National Labor Day to celebrate German workers, a move the trade union leaders welcomed. With their trade union flags waving, Hitler gave a rousing speech to the 1.5 million people assembled on Berlin's Tempelhofer Feld that was nationally broadcast, during which he extolled the nation's revival and working class solidarity.[48] On the following day, the newly formed Gestapo officers, who had been shadowing some 58 trade union leaders, arrested them wherever they could find them—many in their homes.[49] Meanwhile, the SA and police occupied trade union headquarters, arrested functionaries, confiscated their property and assets; all by design so as to be replaced on 12 May by the German Labour Front (DAF), a Nazi organisation placed under the leadership of Robert Ley.[50] For their part, this was the first time the Gestapo operated under its new name since its 26 April 1933 founding in Prussia.[49]

Religious dissent

Many parts of Germany (where religious dissent existed upon the Nazi seizure of power) saw a rapid transformation; a change as noted by the Gestapo in conservative towns such as Würzburg, where people acquiesced to the regime either through accommodation, collaboration, or simple compliance.[51] Increasing religious objections to Nazi policies led the Gestapo to carefully monitor church organisations. For the most part, members of the church did not offer political resistance but simply wanted to ensure that organizational doctrine remained intact.[52]

However, the Nazi regime sought to suppress any source of ideology other than its own, and set out to muzzle or crush the churches in the so-called Kirchenkampf. When Church leaders (clergy) voiced their misgiving about the euthanasia program and Nazi racial policies, Hitler intimated that he considered them "traitors to the people" and went so far as to call them "the destroyers of Germany".[53] The extreme anti-semitism and neo-pagan heresies of the Nazis caused some Christians to outright resist,[54] and Pope Pius XI to issue the encyclical Mit Brennender Sorge denouncing Nazism and warning Catholics against joining or supporting the Party. Some pastors, like the Protestant clergyman Dietrich Bonhoeffer, paid for their opposition with their lives.[55][b]

In an effort to counter the strength and influence of spiritual resistance, Nazi records reveal that the Gestapo's Referat B1 monitored the activities of bishops very closely—instructing that agents be set up in every diocese, that the bishops' reports to the Vatican should be obtained and that the bishops' areas of activity must be found out. Deans were to be targeted as the "eyes and ears of the bishops" and a "vast network" established to monitor the activities of ordinary clergy: "The importance of this enemy is such that inspectors of security police and of the security service will make this group of people and the questions discussed by them their special concern".[57]

In Dachau: The Official History 1933–1945, Paul Berben wrote that clergy were watched closely, and frequently denounced, arrested and sent to Nazi concentration camps: "One priest was imprisoned in Dachau for having stated that there were good folk in England too; another suffered the same fate for warning a girl who wanted to marry an S.S. man after abjuring the Catholic faith; yet another because he conducted a service for a deceased communist". Others were arrested simply on the basis of being "suspected of activities hostile to the State" or that there was reason to "suppose that his dealings might harm society".[58] Over 2,700 Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox clergy were imprisoned at Dachau alone. After Heydrich (who was staunchly anti-Catholic and anti-Christian) was assassinated in Prague, his successor, Ernst Kaltenbrunner, relaxed some of the policies and then disbanded Department IVB (religious opponents) of the Gestapo.[59]

Homosexuality

Violence and arrest were not confined to that opposing political parties, membership in trade unions, or those with dissenting religious opinions, but also homosexuality. It was viewed negatively by Hitler.[60] Homosexuals were correspondingly considered a threat to the Volksgemeinschaft (National Community).[61] From the Nazis rise to national power in 1933, the number of court verdicts against homosexuals steadily increased and only declined once the Second World War started.[60] In 1934, a special Gestapo office was set up in Berlin to deal with homosexuality.[62]

Despite male homosexuality being considered a greater danger to "national survival", lesbianism was likewise viewed as unacceptable—deemed gender nonconformity—and a number of individual reports on lesbians can be found in Gestapo files.[63][c] Between 1933 and 1935, some 4,000 men were arrested; between 1936 and 1939, another 30,000 men were convicted.[64] If homosexuals showed any signs of sympathy to the Nazis' identified racial enemies, they were considered an even greater danger.[65] According to Gestapo case files, the majority of those arrested for homosexuality were males between eighteen and twenty-five years of age.[62]

Student opposition

Between June 1942 and March 1943, student protests were calling for an end to the Nazi regime. These included the non-violent resistance of Hans and Sophie Scholl, two leaders of the White Rose student group.[66] However, resistance groups and those who were in moral or political opposition to the Nazis were stalled by the fear of reprisals from the Gestapo. Fearful of an internal overthrow, the forces of the Gestapo were unleashed on the opposition. Groups like the White Rose and others, such as the Edelweiss Pirates, and the Swing Youth, were placed under close Gestapo observation. Some participants were sent to concentration camps. Leading members of the most famous of these groups, the White Rose, were arrested by the police and turned over to the Gestapo. For several leaders the punishment was death.[67] During the first five months of 1943, the Gestapo arrested thousands suspected of resistance activities and carried out numerous executions. Student opposition leaders were executed in late February, and a major opposition organisation, the Oster Circle, was destroyed in April 1943.[68] Efforts to resist the Nazi regime amounted to very little and had only minor chances of success, particularly since a broad percentage of the German people did not support such actions.[69]

General opposition and military conspiracy

Between 1934 and 1938, opponents of the Nazi regime and their fellow travellers began to emerge. Among the first to speak out were religious dissenters but following in their wake were educators, aristocratic businessmen, office workers, teachers, and others from nearly every walk of life.[70] Most people quickly learned that open opposition was dangerous since Gestapo informants and agents were widespread. Yet a significant number of them still worked against the National Socialist government.[71]

In May 1935, the Gestapo broke up and arrested members of the "Markwitz Circle", a group of former socialists in contact with Otto Strasser, who sought Hitler's downfall.[72] From the mid-1930s into the early 1940s—various groups made up of communists, idealists, working-class people, and far-right conservative opposition organisations covertly fought against Hitler's government, and several of them fomented plots that included Hitler's assassination. Nearly all of them, including: the Römer Group, Robby Group, Solf Circle, Schwarze Reichswehr, the Party of the Radical Middle Class, Jungdeutscher Orden, Schwarze Front and Stahlhelm were either discovered or infiltrated by the Gestapo. This led to corresponding arrests, being sent to concentration camps and execution.[73] One of the methods employed by the Gestapo to contend with these resistance factions was 'protective detention' which facilitated the process in expediting dissenters to concentration camps and against which there was no legal defence.[74]

 
Photograph from 1939: shown from left to right are Franz Josef Huber, Arthur Nebe, Heinrich Himmler, Reinhard Heydrich and Heinrich Müller planning the investigation of the bomb assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on 8 November 1939 in Munich.

Early efforts to resist the Nazis with aid from abroad were hindered when the opposition's peace feelers to the Western Allies did not meet with success. This was partly because of the Venlo incident of 9 November 1939,[75] in which SD and Gestapo agents, posing as anti-Nazis in the Netherlands, kidnapped two British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) officers after having lured them to a meeting to discuss peace terms. This prompted Winston Churchill to ban any further contact with the German opposition.[76] Later, the British and Americans did not want to deal with anti-Nazis because they were fearful that the Soviet Union would believe they were attempting to make deals behind their back.[d]

The German opposition was in an unenviable position by the late spring and early summer of 1943. On one hand, it was next to impossible for them to overthrow Hitler and the party; on the other, the Allied demand for an unconditional surrender meant no opportunity for a compromise peace, which left the military and conservative aristocrats who opposed the regime no option (in their eyes) other than continuing the military struggle.[78] Despite the fear of the Gestapo after mass arrests and executions in the spring, the opposition still plotted and planned. One of the more famous schemes, Operation Valkyrie, involved a number of senior German officers and was carried out by Colonel Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg. In an attempt to assassinate Hitler, Stauffenberg planted a bomb underneath a conference table inside the Wolf's Lair field headquarters.[79] Known as the 20 July plot, this assassination attempt failed and Hitler was only slightly injured. Reports indicate that the Gestapo was caught unaware of this plot as they did not have sufficient protections in place at the appropriate locations nor did they take any preventative steps.[80][81] Stauffenberg and his group were shot on 21 July 1944; meanwhile, his fellow conspirators were rounded up by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp. Thereafter, there was a show trial overseen by Roland Freisler, followed by their execution.[82]

Some Germans were convinced that it was their duty to apply all possible expedients to end the war as quickly as possible. Sabotage efforts were undertaken by members of the Abwehr (military intelligence) leadership, as they recruited people known to oppose the Nazi regime.[83] The Gestapo cracked down ruthlessly on dissidents in Germany, just as they did everywhere else. Opposition became more difficult. Arrests, torture, and executions were common. Terror against "state enemies" had become a way of life to such a degree that the Gestapo's presence and methods were eventually normalised in the minds of people living in Nazi Germany.[84]

Organisation

In January 1933, Hermann Göring, Hitler's minister without portfolio, was appointed the head of the Prussian Police and began filling the political and intelligence units of the Prussian Secret Police with Nazi Party members.[85] A year after the organisation's inception, Göring wrote in a British publication about having created the organisation on his own initiative and how he was "chiefly responsible" for the elimination of the Marxist and Communist threat to Germany and Prussia.[86] Describing the activities of the organisation, Göring boasted about the utter ruthlessness required for Germany's recovery, the establishment of concentration camps for that purpose, and even went on to claim that excesses were committed in the beginning, recounting how beatings took place here and there.[87] On 26 April 1933, he reorganised the force's Amt III as the Gestapa (better-known by the "sobriquet" Gestapo),[88] a secret state police intended to serve the Nazi cause.[89] Less than two weeks later in early May 1933, the Gestapo moved into their Berlin headquarters at Prinz-Albrecht-Straße 8.[90]

As a result of its 1936 merger with the Kripo (National criminal police) to form sub-units of the Sicherheitspolizei (SiPo; Security Police), the Gestapo was officially classified as a government agency. Himmler's subsequent appointment to Chef der Deutschen Polizei (Chief of German Police) and status as Reichsführer-SS made him independent of Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick's nominal control.[23][24]

The SiPo was placed under the direct command of Reinhard Heydrich who was already chief of the Nazi Party's intelligence service, the Sicherheitsdienst (SD).[23] The idea was to fully identify and integrate the party agency (SD) with the state agency (SiPo). Most SiPo members joined the SS and held a rank in both organisations. Nevertheless, in practice there was jurisdictional overlap and operational conflict between the SD and Gestapo.[91]

 
Heinrich Müller, Chief of the Gestapo; 1939–1945

In September 1939, the SiPo and SD were merged into the newly created Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA; Reich Security Main Office). Both the Gestapo and Kripo became distinct departments within the RSHA.[30] Although the Sicherheitspolizei was officially disbanded, the term SiPo was figuratively used to describe any RSHA personnel throughout the remainder of the war. In lieu of naming convention changes, the original construct of the SiPo, Gestapo, and Kripo cannot be fully comprehended as "discrete entities", since they ultimately formed "a conglomerate in which each was wedded to each other and the SS through its Security Service, the SD".[92]

The creation of the RSHA represented the formalisation, at the top level, of the relationship under which the SD served as the intelligence agency for the security police. A similar co-ordination existed in the local offices. Within Germany and areas which were incorporated within the Reich for the purpose of civil administration, local offices of the Gestapo, criminal police, and SD were formally separate. They were subject to co-ordination by inspectors of the security police and SD on the staffs of the local higher SS and police leaders, however, and one of the principal functions of the local SD units was to serve as the intelligence agency for the local Gestapo units. In the occupied territories, the formal relationship between local units of the Gestapo, criminal police, and SD was slightly closer.[93]

The Gestapo became known as RSHA Amt IV ("Department or Office IV") with Heinrich Müller as its chief.[31] In January 1943, Himmler appointed Ernst Kaltenbrunner RSHA chief; almost seven months after Heydrich had been assassinated.[32] The specific internal departments of Amt IV were as follows:[94]

  • Department A (Political Opponents)
    • Communists (A1)
    • Counter-sabotage (A2)
    • Reactionaries, liberals and opposition (A3)
    • Protective services (A4)
  • Department B (Sects and Churches)
    • Catholicism (B1)
    • Protestantism (B2)
    • Freemasons and other churches (B3)
    • Jewish affairs (B4)
  • Department C (Administration and Party Affairs), central administrative office of the Gestapo, responsible for card files of all personnel including all officials.
    • Files, card, indexes, information and administration (C1)
    • Protective custody (C2)
    • Press office (C3)
    • NSDAP matters (C4)
  • Department D (Occupied Territories), administration for regions outside the Reich.
    • Protectorate affairs, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, regions of Yugoslavia, Greece (D1)
    • General Government(D2)
    • Confidential office – hostile foreigners, emigrants (D3)
    • Occupied territories – France, Belgium, Holland, Norway, Denmark (D4)
    • Occupied Eastern territories (D5)
  • Department E (Security and counterintelligence)
    • In the Reich (E1)
    • Policy and economic formation (E2)
    • West (E3)
    • Scandinavia (North)(E4)
    • East (E5)
    • South (E6)

In 1941 Referat N, the central command office of the Gestapo was formed. However, these internal departments remained and the Gestapo continued to be a department under the RSHA umbrella. The local offices of the Gestapo, known as Gestapo Leitstellen and Stellen, answered to a local commander known as the Inspekteur der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD ("Inspector of the Security Police and Security Service") who, in turn, was under the dual command of Referat N of the Gestapo and also his local SS and Police Leader.[95][96]

In total, there were some fifty-four regional Gestapo offices across the German federal states.[97] The Gestapo also maintained offices at all Nazi concentration camps, held an office on the staff of the SS and Police Leaders, and supplied personnel as needed to formations such as the Einsatzgruppen.[98] Personnel assigned to these auxiliary duties were often removed from the Gestapo chain of command and fell under the authority of branches of the SS.[99] It was the Gestapo chief, SS-Brigadierführer Heinrich Müller, who kept Hitler abreast of the killing operations in the Soviet Union and who issued orders to the four Einsatzgruppen that their continual work in the east was to be "presented to the Führer."[100]

Female Criminal Investigation Career

According to regulations issued by the Reich Security Main Office in 1940, women who had been trained in social work or having a similar education could be hired as female detectives. Female youth leaders, lawyers, business administrators with experience in social work, female leaders in the Reichsarbeitsdienst and personnel administrators in the Bund Deutscher Mädel were hired as detectives after a one-year course, if they had several years professional experience. Later, nurses, kindergarten teachers, and trained female commercial employees with an aptitude for police work were hired as female detectives after a two-year course as Kriminaloberassistentin and could promote to a Kriminalsekretärin. After another two or three years in that grade, the female detective could advance to Kriminalobersekretärin. Further promotions to Kriminalkommissarin and Kriminalrätin were also possible.[101]

Membership

In 1933, there was no purge of the German police forces.[102] The vast majority of Gestapo officers came from the police forces of the Weimar Republic; members of the SS, the SA, and the NSDAP also joined the Gestapo but were less numerous.[102] By March 1937, the Gestapo employed an estimated 6,500 people in fifty-four regional offices across the Reich.[103] Additional staff were added in March 1938 consequent the annexation of Austria and again in October 1938 with the acquisition of the Sudetenland.[103] In 1939, only 3,000 out of the total of 20,000 Gestapo men held SS ranks, and in most cases, these were honorary.[104] One man who served in the Prussian Gestapo in 1933 recalled that most of his co-workers "were by no means Nazis. For the most part they were young professional civil service officers..."[104] The Nazis valued police competence more than politics, so in general in 1933, almost all of the men who served in the various state police forces under the Weimar Republic stayed on in their jobs.[105] In Würzburg, which is one of the few places in Germany where most of the Gestapo records survived, every member of the Gestapo was a career policeman or had a police background.[106]

The Canadian historian Robert Gellately wrote that most Gestapo men were not Nazis, but at the same time were not opposed to the Nazi regime, which they were willing to serve, in whatever task they were called upon to perform.[106] Over time, membership in the Gestapo included ideological training, particularly once Werner Best assumed a leading role for training in April 1936. Employing biological metaphors, Best emphasised a doctrine which encouraged members of the Gestapo to view themselves as 'doctors' to the 'national body' in the struggle against "pathogens" and "diseases"; among the implied sicknesses were "communists, Freemasons, and the churches—and above and behind all these stood the Jews".[107] Heydrich thought along similar lines and advocated both defensive and offensive measures on the part of the Gestapo, so as to prevent any subversion or destruction of the National Socialist body.[108]

Whether trained as police originally or not, Gestapo agents themselves were shaped by their socio-political environment. Historian George C. Browder contends that there was a four-part process (authorisation, bolstering, routinisation, and dehumanisation) in effect which legitimised the psycho-social atmosphere conditioning members of the Gestapo to radicalised violence.[109] Browder also describes a sandwich effect, where from above; Gestapo agents were subjected to ideologically oriented racism and criminal biological theories; and from below, the Gestapo was transformed by SS personnel who did not have the proper police training, which showed in their propensity for unrestrained violence.[110] This admixture certainly shaped the Gestapo's public image which they sought to maintain despite their increasing workload; an image which helped them identify and eliminate enemies of the Nazi state.[111]

Population ratios, methods and effectiveness

Contrary to popular belief, the Gestapo was not the all-pervasive, omnipotent agency in German society.[112] In Germany proper, many towns and cities had fewer than 50 official Gestapo personnel. For example, in 1939 Stettin and Frankfurt am Main only had a total of 41 Gestapo men combined.[112] In Düsseldorf, the local Gestapo office of only 281 men were responsible for the entire Lower Rhine region, which comprised 4 million people.[113] "V-men", as undercover Gestapo agents were known, were used to infiltrate Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and Communist opposition groups, but this was more the exception than the rule.[114] The Gestapo office in Saarbrücken had 50 full-term informers in 1939.[114] The District Office in Nuremberg, which had the responsibility for all of northern Bavaria, employed a total of 80–100 full-term informers between 1943 and 1945.[114] The majority of Gestapo informers were not full-term employees working undercover, but were rather ordinary citizens who chose to denounce other people to the Gestapo.[115]

According to Canadian historian Robert Gellately's analysis of the local offices established, the Gestapo was—for the most part—made up of bureaucrats and clerical workers who depended upon denunciations by citizens for their information. Gellately argued that it was because of the widespread willingness of Germans to inform on each other to the Gestapo that Germany between 1933 and 1945 was a prime example of panopticism.[116] The Gestapo—at times—was overwhelmed with denunciations and most of its time was spent sorting out the credible from the less credible denunciations.[117] Many of the local offices were understaffed and overworked, struggling with the paper load caused by so many denunciations.[118] Gellately has also suggested that the Gestapo was "a reactive organisation...constructed within German society and whose functioning was structurally dependent on the continuing co-operation of German citizens".[119]

After 1939, when many Gestapo personnel were called up for war-related work such as service with the Einsatzgruppen, the level of overwork and understaffing at the local offices increased.[118] For information about what was happening in German society, the Gestapo continued to be mostly dependent upon denunciations.[120] 80% of all Gestapo investigations were started in response to information provided by denunciations by ordinary Germans; while 10% were started in response to information provided by other branches of the German government and another 10% started in response to information that the Gestapo itself unearthed.[117] The information supplied by denunciations often led the Gestapo in determining who was arrested.[120]

The popular picture of the Gestapo with its spies everywhere terrorising German society has been rejected by many historians as a myth invented after the war as a cover for German society's widespread complicity in allowing the Gestapo to work.[120][121] Work done by social historians such as Detlev Peukert, Robert Gellately, Reinhard Mann, Inge Marssolek, René Otto, Klaus-Michael Mallmann and Paul Gerhard, which by focusing on what the local offices were doing has shown the Gestapo's almost total dependence on denunciations from ordinary Germans, and very much discredited the older "Big Brother" picture with the Gestapo having its eyes and ears everywhere.[122] For example, of the 84 cases in Würzburg of Rassenschande ("race defilement"—sexual relations with non-Aryans), 45 (54%) were started in response to denunciations by ordinary people, two (2%) by information provided by other branches of the government, 20 (24%) via information gained during interrogations of people relating to other matters, four (5%) from information from (Nazi) NSDAP organisations, two (2%) during "political evaluations" and 11 (13%) have no source listed while none were started by Gestapo's own "observations" of the people of Würzburg.[123]

An examination of 213 denunciations in Düsseldorf showed that 37% were motivated by personal conflicts, no motive could be established in 39%, and 24% were motivated by support for the Nazi regime.[124] The Gestapo always showed a special interest in denunciations concerning sexual matters, especially cases concerning Rassenschande with Jews or between Germans and foreigners, in particular Polish slave workers; the Gestapo applied even harsher methods to the foreign workers in the country, especially those from Poland,[125] Jews, Catholics and homosexuals. [126] As time went by, anonymous denunciations to the Gestapo caused trouble to various NSDAP officials, who often found themselves being investigated by the Gestapo.[127]

Of the political cases, 61 people were investigated for suspicion of belonging to the KPD, 44 for the SPD and 69 for other political parties.[128] Most of the political investigations took place between 1933 and 1935 with the all-time high of 57 cases in 1935.[128] After that year, political investigations declined with only 18 investigations in 1938, 13 in 1939, two in 1941, seven in 1942, four in 1943 and one in 1944.[128] The "other" category associated with non-conformity included everything from a man who drew a caricature of Hitler to a Catholic teacher suspected of being lukewarm about teaching National Socialism in his classroom.[128] The "administrative control" category concerned those who were breaking the law concerning residency in the city.[128] The "conventional criminality" category concerned economic crimes such as money laundering, smuggling and homosexuality.[129]

Normal methods of investigation included various forms of blackmail, threats and extortion to secure "confessions".[130] Beyond that, sleep deprivation and various forms of harassment were used as investigative methods.[130] Failing that, torture and planting evidence were common methods of resolving a case, especially if the case concerned someone Jewish.[131] Brutality on the part of interrogators—often prompted by denunciations and followed with roundups—enabled the Gestapo to uncover numerous resistance networks; it also made them seem like they knew everything and could do anything they wanted.[132]

While the total number of Gestapo officials was limited when contrasted against the represented populations, the average Volksgenosse (Nazi term for the "member of the German people") was typically not under observation, so the statistical ratio between Gestapo officials and inhabitants is "largely worthless and of little significance" according to some recent scholars.[133] As historian Eric Johnson remarked, "The Nazi terror was selective terror", with its focus upon political opponents, ideological dissenters (clergy and religious organisations), career criminals, the Sinti and Roma population, handicapped persons, homosexuals and above all, upon the Jews.[134] "Selective terror" by the Gestapo, as mentioned by Johnson, is also supported by historian Richard Evans who states that, "Violence and intimidation rarely touched the lives of most ordinary Germans. Denunciation was the exception, not the rule, as far as the behaviour of the vast majority of Germans was concerned."[135] The involvement of ordinary Germans in denunciations also needs to be put into perspective so as not to exonerate the Gestapo. As Evans makes clear, "...it was not the ordinary German people who engaged in surveillance, it was the Gestapo; nothing happened until the Gestapo received a denunciation, and it was the Gestapo's active pursuit of deviance and dissent that was the only thing that gave denunciations meaning."[136] The Gestapo's effectiveness remained in the ability to "project" omnipotence...they co-opted the assistance of the German population by using denunciations to their advantage; proving in the end a powerful, ruthless and effective organ of terror under the Nazi regime that was seemingly everywhere.[137] Lastly, the Gestapo's effectiveness, while aided by denunciations and the watchful eye of ordinary Germans, was more the result of the co-ordination and co-operation amid the various police organs within Germany, the assistance of the SS, and the support provided by the various Nazi Party organisations; all of them together forming an organised persecution network.[138]

Operations in Nazi-occupied territories

As an instrument of Nazi power, terror, and repression, the Gestapo operated throughout occupied Europe.[139] Much like their affiliated organisations, the SS and the SD, the Gestapo "played a leading part" in enslaving and deporting workers from occupied territory, torturing and executing civilians, singling out and murdering Jews, and subjecting Allied prisoners of war to terrible treatment.[140] To this end, the Gestapo was "a vital component both in Nazi repression and the Holocaust."[141] Once the German armies advanced into enemy territory, they were accompanied by Einsatzgruppen staffed by officers from the Gestapo and Kripo, who usually operated in the rear areas to administer and police the occupied land.[142] Whenever a region came fully under German military occupational jurisdiction, the Gestapo administered all executive actions under the military commander's authority, albeit operating relatively independent of it.[142]

Occupation meant administration and policing, a duty assigned to the SS, the SD, and the Gestapo even before hostilities began, as was the case for Czechoslovakia.[143] Correspondingly, Gestapo offices were established in a territory once occupied.[103][e] Some locals aided the Gestapo, whether as professional police auxiliaries or in other duties. Nonetheless, operations performed either by German members of the Gestapo or auxiliaries from willing collaborators of other nationalities were inconsistent in both disposition and effectiveness. Varying degrees of pacification and police enforcement measures were necessary in each place, dependent on how cooperative or resistant the locals were to Nazi mandates and racial policies.[144]

Throughout the Eastern territories, the Gestapo and other Nazi organisations co-opted the assistance of indigenous police units, nearly all of whom were uniformed and able to carry out drastic actions.[145] Many of the auxiliary police personnel operating on behalf of German Order Police, the SD, and Gestapo were members of the Schutzmannschaft, which included staffing by Ukrainians, Belorussians, Russians, Estonians, Lithuanians, and Latvians.[146] While in many countries the Nazis occupied in the East, the local domestic police forces supplemented German operations, noted Holocaust historian, Raul Hilberg, asserts that "those of Poland were least involved in anti-Jewish actions."[145] Nonetheless, German authorities ordered the mobilisation of reserve Polish police forces, known as the Blue Police, which strengthened the Nazi police presence and carried out numerous "police" functions; in some cases, its functionaries even identified and rounded up Jews or performed other unsavory duties on behalf of their German masters.[147]

In places like Denmark, there were some 550 uniformed Danes in Copenhagen working with the Gestapo, patrolling and terrorising the local population at the behest of their German overseers, many of whom were arrested after the war.[148] Other Danish civilians, like in many places across Europe, acted as Gestapo informants but this should not be seen as wholehearted support for the Nazi program, as motives for cooperation varied.[149] Whereas in France, the number of members in the Carlingue (French Gestapo) who worked on behalf of the Nazis was upwards of 30,000 to 32,000; they conducted operations nearly indistinguishable from their German equivalents.[150]

Nuremberg trials

 
Gestapo building at Prinz-Albrecht-Straße 8, after the 1945 bombing.

Between 14 November 1945 and 3 October 1946, the Allies established an International Military Tribunal (IMT) to try 22 major Nazi war criminals and six groups for crimes against peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity.[151][152] Nineteen of the 22 were convicted, and twelve—Martin Bormann (in absentia), Hans Frank, Wilhelm Frick, Hermann Göring, Alfred Jodl, Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Wilhelm Keitel, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Alfred Rosenberg, Fritz Sauckel, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Julius Streicher—were given the death penalty. Three—Walther Funk, Rudolf Hess, Erich Raeder—received life terms; and the remaining four—Karl Dönitz, Konstantin von Neurath, Albert Speer, and Baldur von Schirach—received shorter prison sentences. Three others—Hans Fritzsche, Hjalmar Schacht, and Franz von Papen—were acquitted. At that time, the Gestapo was condemned as a criminal organisation, along with the SS.[93] However, Gestapo leader Heinrich Müller was never tried, as he disappeared at the end of the war.[153][f]

 
German Gestapo agents arrested after the liberation of Liège, Belgium are pictured in a cell at the Citadel of Liège, October 1944

Leaders, organisers, investigators and accomplices participating in the formulation or execution of a common plan or conspiracy to commit the crimes specified were declared responsible for all acts performed by any persons in execution of such plan. The official positions of defendants as heads of state or holders of high government offices were not to free them from responsibility or mitigate their punishment; nor was the fact that a defendant acted pursuant to an order of a superior to excuse him from responsibility, although it might be considered by the IMT in mitigation of punishment.[93]

At the trial of any individual member of any group or organisation, the IMT was authorised to declare (in connection with any act of which the individual was convicted) that the group or organisation to which he belonged was a criminal organisation. When a group or organisation was thus declared criminal, the competent national authority of any signatory had the right to bring persons to trial for membership in that organisation, with the criminal nature of the group or organisation assumed proved.[154]

The IMT subsequently convicted three of the groups: the Nazi leadership corps, the SS (including the SD) and the Gestapo. Gestapo members Hermann Göring, Ernst Kaltenbrunner and Arthur Seyss-Inquart were individually convicted. While three groups were acquitted of collective war crimes charges, this did not relieve individual members of those groups from conviction and punishment under the denazification programme. Members of the three convicted groups, however, were subject to apprehension by Britain, the United States, the Soviet Union and France.[155]These groups—the Nazi Party and government leadership, the German General staff and High Command (OKW); the Sturmabteilung (SA); the Schutzstaffel (SS), including the Sicherheitsdienst (SD); and the Gestapo—had an aggregate membership exceeding two million, making a large number of their members liable to trial when the organisations were convicted.[156]

Aftermath

In 1997, Cologne transformed the former regional Gestapo headquarters in Cologne—the EL-DE Haus—into a museum to document the Gestapo's actions.[157]

After the war, U.S. Counterintelligence Corps employed the former Lyon Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie for his anti-communist efforts and also helped him escape to Bolivia.[158]

Leadership

No. Portrait Chief Took office Left office Time in office
1
 
Diels, RudolfRudolf Diels
(1900–1957)
26 April 193320 April 193411 months
2
 
Heydrich, ReinhardReinhard Heydrich
(1904–1942)
22 April 193427 September 19395 years, 5 months
3
 
Müller, HeinrichHeinrich Müller
(1900–1945)
27 September 1939May 1945 †5 years, 7 months

Principal agents and officers

Ranks and uniforms

The Gestapo was a secretive plainclothes agency and agents typically wore civilian suits. There were strict protocols protecting the identity of Gestapo field personnel. When asked for identification, an operative was required only to present his warrant disc and not a picture identification. This disc identified the operative as a member of the Gestapo without revealing personal information, except when ordered to do so by an authorised official.[159]

Leitstellung (district office) staff did wear the grey SS service uniform, but with police-pattern shoulderboards, and SS rank insignia on the left collar patch. The right collar patch was black without the sig runes. The SD sleeve diamond (SD Raute) insignia was worn on the lower left sleeve, even by SiPo men who were not in the SD. Uniforms worn by Gestapo men assigned to the Einsatzgruppen in occupied territories, were at first indistinguishable from the Waffen-SS field uniform. Complaints from the Waffen-SS led to a change of rank insignia shoulder boards from those of the Waffen-SS to those of the Ordnungspolizei.[160]

The Gestapo maintained police detective ranks which were used for all officers, both those who were and who were not concurrently SS members.[g]

Junior career Senior career Orpo equivalent SS equivalent
Kriminalassistentanwärter Wachtmeister Unterscharführer
Kriminalassistent Oberwachtmeister Scharführer
Kriminaloberassistent Revieroberwachtmeister Oberscharführer
Kriminalsekretär Hauptwachtmeister Hauptscharführer
Meister Sturmscharführer
Kriminalobersekretär Hilfskriminalkommissar
Kriminalkommissar auf Probe
apl. Kriminalkommissar
Leutnant Untersturmführer
Kriminalinspektor Kriminalkommissar with less than three years in that rank Oberleutnant Obersturmführer
Kriminalrat with less than three years in that rank Hauptmann Hauptsturmführer
Kriminalrat
Kriminaldirektor
Regierungs und Kriminalrat
Major Sturmbannführer
Oberregierungs und Kriminalrat Oberstleutnant Obersturmbannführer
Regierungs und KriminaldirektorReichskriminaldirektor Oberst StandartenführerOberführer
  • Junior career = einfacher Vollzugsdienst der Sicherheitspolizei (Laufbahn U 18: SS-Unterführer der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD).
  • Senior career = leitender Vollzugsdienst der Sicherheitspolizei (Laufbahn XIV: SS-Führer der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD).

Sources:[161]

Rank insignia
Sicherheitspolizei Rank insignia Sicherheitsdienst
Kriminalassistent
 
SS-Scharführer
Kriminaloberassistent
 
SS-Oberscharführer
Kriminalsekretär
 
SS-Hauptscharführer
Kriminalobersekretär SS-Untersturmführer
Kriminalinspektor
 
SS-Obersturmführer
Kriminalkommissar SS-Hauptsturmführer
Kriminalrat
with more than three years in the grade
 
SS-Sturmbannführer
Kriminaldirektor
Regierungs und Kriminalrat
Oberregierungs und Kriminalrat
 
SS-Obersturmbannführer
Regierungs und Kriminaldirektor
 
SS-Standartenführer
Reichskriminaldirektor
 
SS-Oberführer
Source: [162]

See also

Informational notes

  1. ^ Operation Crossbow was one preliminary missions for Operation Overlord. See: Operation Crossbow – Preliminary missions for the Operation Overlord
  2. ^ Bonhoeffer was an active opponent of Nazism in the German resistance movement. Arrested by the Gestapo in 1943, he was sent to Buchenwald and later to Flossenbürg concentration camp where he was executed.[56]
  3. ^ The stricter laws did not apply to lesbians as their behaviour was never officially criminalised, even though their behaviours were labelled "deviant".[64]
  4. ^ More than that, the Anglo-American common language and capital interests kept Stalin at a distance since he felt the other Allied powers were hoping the fascists and Communists would destroy one another.[77]
  5. ^ Petschek Palace was the Gestapo headquarters in Prague. See for instance the following article in Radio Prague International: https://english.radio.cz/petscheks-palace-once-headquarters-nazi-secret-police-8575365
  6. ^ There were reports that Müller ended up in the foreign secret service at Washington D.C., some allege he was in Moscow working for the Soviets, still others claimed he escaped to South America—but none of the myths have ever been proven; all of which adds to the "mysterious power of the Gestapo".[153]
  7. ^ Although an agent in uniform wore the collar insignia of the equivalent SS rank, he was still addressed as, e.g., Herr Kriminalrat, not Sturmbannführer. The stock character of the "Gestapo Major", usually dressed in the prewar black SS uniform, is a figment of Hollywood's imagination.

Citations

  1. ^ Gellately 1992, p. 44.
  2. ^ Wallbaum 2009, p. 43.
  3. ^ Childers 2017, p. 235.
  4. ^ Buchheim 1968, p. 145.
  5. ^ Buchheim 1968, p. 146.
  6. ^ Flaherty 2004, pp. 64–65.
  7. ^ Shirer 1990, p. 270.
  8. ^ Miller 2006, p. 433.
  9. ^ Flaherty 2004, pp. 64–66.
  10. ^ Flaherty 2004, p. 66.
  11. ^ Evans 2005, p. 54.
  12. ^ Williams 2001, p. 61.
  13. ^ Tuchel & Schattenfroh 1987, p. 80.
  14. ^ Tuchel & Schattenfroh 1987, pp. 82–83.
  15. ^ Delarue 2008, pp. 102–103.
  16. ^ Evans 2006, p. 29.
  17. ^ Benz 2007, p. 50.
  18. ^ Burleigh 2000, p. 159.
  19. ^ Benz 2007, p. 51.
  20. ^ Benz 2007, p. 53.
  21. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, pp. 14–15.
  22. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 15.
  23. ^ a b c d e Williams 2001, p. 77.
  24. ^ a b Longerich 2012, p. 204.
  25. ^ Longerich 2012, p. 201.
  26. ^ Weale 2010, p. 132.
  27. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 17.
  28. ^ McNab 2009, p. 156.
  29. ^ Shirer 1990, p. 271.
  30. ^ a b Longerich 2012, pp. 469, 470.
  31. ^ a b Weale 2010, p. 131.
  32. ^ a b Longerich 2012, p. 661.
  33. ^ Weale 2010, p. 145.
  34. ^ USHMM, "Law and Justice in the Third Reich".
  35. ^ Snyder 1994, p. 242.
  36. ^ Gruchmann 1981, p. 395.
  37. ^ Manchester 2003, p. 519.
  38. ^ Smith 2004, pp. 262–274.
  39. ^ US National Archives, "German Police Records Opened at the National Archives".
  40. ^ Breitman 2005, p. 139.
  41. ^ Boeckl-Klamper, Mang & Neugebauer 2018, pp. 299–305.
  42. ^ Broucek 2008, p. 414.
  43. ^ Thurner 2017, p. 187.
  44. ^ Boeckl-Klamper, Mang & Neugebauer 2018, p. 300.
  45. ^ Delarue 2008, pp. 126–140.
  46. ^ Merson 1985, p. 50.
  47. ^ Longerich 2019, pp. 311–312.
  48. ^ Longerich 2019, p. 312.
  49. ^ a b Delarue 2008, p. 21.
  50. ^ Longerich 2019, pp. 312–313.
  51. ^ Gellately 1992, pp. 94–100.
  52. ^ McDonough 2005, pp. 30–40.
  53. ^ Schmid 1947, pp. 61–63.
  54. ^ Benz 2007, pp. 42–47.
  55. ^ McDonough 2005, pp. 32–33.
  56. ^ Burleigh 2000, p. 727.
  57. ^ Berben 1975, pp. 141–142.
  58. ^ Berben 1975, p. 142.
  59. ^ Steigmann-Gall 2003, pp. 251–252.
  60. ^ a b Gellately 2020, p. 176.
  61. ^ McDonough 2017, p. 160.
  62. ^ a b McDonough 2017, p. 181.
  63. ^ Gellately 2020, pp. 176–177.
  64. ^ a b McDonough 2017, p. 180.
  65. ^ Gellately 2020, p. 177.
  66. ^ McDonough 2005, pp. 21–29.
  67. ^ Williamson 2002, pp. 118–119.
  68. ^ Delarue 2008, p. 318.
  69. ^ Johnson 1999, p. 306.
  70. ^ Hoffmann 1977, p. 28.
  71. ^ Hoffmann 1977, pp. 29–30.
  72. ^ Hoffmann 1977, p. 30.
  73. ^ Hoffmann 1977, pp. 30–32.
  74. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 58.
  75. ^ Hoffmann 1977, p. 121.
  76. ^ Reitlinger 1989, p. 144.
  77. ^ Overy 1997, pp. 245–281.
  78. ^ Hildebrand 1984, pp. 86–87.
  79. ^ Benz 2007, pp. 245–249.
  80. ^ Reitlinger 1989, p. 323.
  81. ^ Höhne 2001, p. 532.
  82. ^ Höhne 2001, p. 537.
  83. ^ Spielvogel 1992, p. 256.
  84. ^ Peukert 1989, pp. 198–199.
  85. ^ McNab 2009, p. 150.
  86. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 2011, p. 97.
  87. ^ Manvell & Fraenkel 2011, pp. 97–98.
  88. ^ Weale 2012, p. 85.
  89. ^ McNab 2009, pp. 150, 162.
  90. ^ Tuchel & Schattenfroh 1987, p. 72.
  91. ^ Weale 2010, pp. 134, 135.
  92. ^ Browder 1996, p. 103.
  93. ^ a b c Avalon Project, Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression.
  94. ^ McNab 2009, pp. 160, 161.
  95. ^ McNab 2009, p. 47.
  96. ^ Buchheim 1968, pp. 146–147.
  97. ^ McDonough 2017, p. 49.
  98. ^ McDonough 2017, p. 48–49, 230–233.
  99. ^ State of Israel 1992, p. 69.
  100. ^ Kershaw 2008, p. 671.
  101. ^ Ahlers 2001, pp. 33–36.
  102. ^ a b Gellately 1992, p. 50.
  103. ^ a b c Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 34.
  104. ^ a b Gellately 1992, p. 51.
  105. ^ Gellately 1992, pp. 54–55.
  106. ^ a b Gellately 1992, p. 59.
  107. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 30.
  108. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 31.
  109. ^ Browder 1996, pp. 33–34.
  110. ^ Browder 1996, pp. 88–90.
  111. ^ Höhne 2001, pp. 186–193.
  112. ^ a b McNab 2009, p. 163.
  113. ^ Mallmann & Paul 1994, p. 174.
  114. ^ a b c Mallmann & Paul 1994, p. 181.
  115. ^ Gellately 1992, pp. 132–150.
  116. ^ Gellately 1992, pp. 11–12, 22.
  117. ^ a b Rees 1997, p. 65.
  118. ^ a b Mallmann & Paul 1994, p. 175.
  119. ^ Gellately 1992, p. 136.
  120. ^ a b c Rees 1997, p. 64.
  121. ^ Mallmann & Paul 1994, pp. 168–169.
  122. ^ Mallmann & Paul 1994, pp. 172–173.
  123. ^ Gellately 1992, p. 162.
  124. ^ Gellately 1992, p. 146.
  125. ^ Gellately 1992, p. 259.
  126. ^ Gellately 1992, pp. 49, 146.
  127. ^ Gellately 1992, pp. 151–152.
  128. ^ a b c d e Gellately 1992, p. 48.
  129. ^ Gellately 1992, p. 49.
  130. ^ a b Gellately 1992, p. 131.
  131. ^ Gellately 1992, p. 132.
  132. ^ Ayçoberry 1999, p. 272.
  133. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 35.
  134. ^ Johnson 1999, pp. 483–485.
  135. ^ Evans 2006, p. 114.
  136. ^ Evans 2006, p. 115.
  137. ^ Delarue 2008, pp. 83–140.
  138. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, p. 82.
  139. ^ Lemkin 2008, pp. 15–17.
  140. ^ Russell 2002, p. 7.
  141. ^ USHMM, "Gestapo".
  142. ^ a b Russell 2002, p. 10.
  143. ^ Crankshaw 2002, pp. 147–148.
  144. ^ Hesse, Kufeke & Sander 2010, pp. 177–179, 350–352.
  145. ^ a b Hilberg 1992, p. 92.
  146. ^ Hilberg 1992, p. 93.
  147. ^ Skibińska 2012, pp. 84, 88–89, 94–106.
  148. ^ Holbraad 2017, pp. 46–47.
  149. ^ Holbraad 2017, p. 47.
  150. ^ Rajsfus 1995, pp. 51–52.
  151. ^ Bernstein 1947, pp. 267–275.
  152. ^ Evans 2010, pp. 741–743.
  153. ^ a b Dams & Stolle 2014, pp. 176–177.
  154. ^ Bernstein 1947, pp. 246–259.
  155. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, pp. 158–161.
  156. ^ Dams & Stolle 2014, pp. 159–161.
  157. ^ The National Socialist Document Center of Cologne.
  158. ^ Bönisch & Wiegrefe 2011.
  159. ^ Frei 1993, pp. 106–107.
  160. ^ Mollo 1992, pp. 33–36.
  161. ^ Banach 2013, p. 64.
  162. ^ Mollo 1992, pp. 38–39, 54.

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External links

  • Festung Furulund – magasinet – Dagbladet.no (in Norwegian)
  • Collection of testimonies concerning Gestapo activity in occupied Poland during WWII in "Chronicles of Terror" database

gestapo, several, terms, redirect, here, wider, secret, police, secret, police, confused, with, gestapu, indonesia, geheime, staatspolizei, transl, secret, state, police, abbreviated, german, ɡəˈʃtaːpo, ɑː, official, secret, police, nazi, germany, german, occu. Several terms redirect here For the wider use of Secret Police see Secret police It is not to be confused with Gestapu in Indonesia The Geheime Staatspolizei transl Secret State Police abbreviated Gestapo German ɡeˈʃtaːpo ɡ e ˈ s t ɑː p oʊ 3 was the official secret police of Nazi Germany and in German occupied Europe GestapoGeheime StaatspolizeiGestapo headquarters at 8 Prinz Albrecht Street in Berlin 1933 Agency overviewFormed26 April 1933 1933 04 26 Preceding agencyPrussian Secret Police founded 1851 Dissolved8 May 1945 1945 05 08 TypeSecret policeJurisdictionGermany and Occupied EuropeHeadquartersPrinz Albrecht Strasse 8 Berlin52 30 25 N 13 22 58 E 52 50694 N 13 38278 E 52 50694 13 38278Employees32 000 1944 est 1 Ministers responsibleHermann Goring 1933 1934 Minister President of PrussiaWilhelm Frick 1936 1943 nominal authority Interior MinisterHeinrich Himmler Chief of the German Police 1936 1945 Interior Minister 1943 1945Agency executivesRudolf Diels 1933 1934 2 Reinhard Heydrich 1934 1939 Heinrich Muller 1939 1945 Parent agencyAllgemeine SSRSHASicherheitspolizeiThe force was created by Hermann Goring in 1933 by combining the various political police agencies of Prussia into one organisation On 20 April 1934 oversight of the Gestapo passed to the head of the Schutzstaffel SS Heinrich Himmler who was also appointed Chief of German Police by Hitler in 1936 Instead of being exclusively a Prussian state agency the Gestapo became a national one as a sub office of the Sicherheitspolizei SiPo Security Police From 27 September 1939 it was administered by the Reich Security Main Office RSHA It became known as Amt Dept 4 of the RSHA and was considered a sister organisation to the Sicherheitsdienst SD Security Service During World War II the Gestapo played a key role in the Holocaust After the war ended the Gestapo was declared a criminal organisation by the International Military Tribunal IMT at the Nuremberg trials Contents 1 History 2 Counterintelligence 3 Suppression of resistance and persecution 3 1 Trade unions 3 2 Religious dissent 3 3 Homosexuality 3 4 Student opposition 3 5 General opposition and military conspiracy 4 Organisation 4 1 Female Criminal Investigation Career 5 Membership 6 Population ratios methods and effectiveness 7 Operations in Nazi occupied territories 8 Nuremberg trials 9 Aftermath 10 Leadership 11 Principal agents and officers 12 Ranks and uniforms 13 See also 14 Informational notes 15 Citations 16 Bibliography 17 External linksHistoryAfter Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany Hermann Goring future commander of the Luftwaffe and the number two man in the Nazi Party was named Interior Minister of Prussia 4 This gave Goring command of the largest police force in Germany Soon afterward Goring detached the political and intelligence sections from the police and filled their ranks with Nazis On 26 April 1933 Goring merged the two units as the Geheime Staatspolizei which was abbreviated by a post office clerk for a franking stamp and became known as the Gestapo 5 6 He originally wanted to name it the Secret Police Office Geheimes Polizeiamt but the German initials GPA were too similar to those of the Soviet State Political Directorate Gosudarstvennoye Politicheskoye Upravlenie or GPU 7 Rudolf Diels first Commander of the Gestapo 1933 1934 Heinrich Himmler and Hermann Goring at the meeting to formally hand over control of the Gestapo Berlin 1934 The first commander of the Gestapo was Rudolf Diels a protege of Goring Diels was appointed with the title of chief of Abteilung Ia Department 1a of the Prussian Secret Police 8 Diels was best known as the primary interrogator of Marinus van der Lubbe after the Reichstag fire In late 1933 the Reich Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick wanted to integrate all the police forces of the German states under his control Goring outflanked him by removing the Prussian political and intelligence departments from the state interior ministry 9 Goring took over the Gestapo in 1934 and urged Hitler to extend the agency s authority throughout Germany This represented a radical departure from German tradition which held that law enforcement was mostly a Land state and local matter In this he ran into conflict with Schutzstaffel SS chief Heinrich Himmler who was police chief of the second most powerful German state Bavaria Frick did not have the political power to take on Goring by himself so he allied with Himmler With Frick s support Himmler pushed on by his right hand man Reinhard Heydrich took over the political police in state after state Soon only Prussia was left 10 Concerned that Diels was not ruthless enough to effectively counteract the power of the Sturmabteilung SA Goring handed over control of the Gestapo to Himmler on 20 April 1934 11 Also on that date Hitler appointed Himmler chief of all German police outside Prussia Heydrich named chief of the Gestapo by Himmler on 22 April 1934 also continued as head of the SS Security Service Sicherheitsdienst SD 12 Himmler and Heydrich both immediately began installing their own personnel in select positions several of whom were directly from the Bavarian Political Police such as Heinrich Muller Franz Josef Huber and Josef Meisinger 13 Many of the Gestapo employees in the newly established offices were young and highly educated in a wide variety of academic fields and moreover represented a new generation of National Socialist adherents who were hard working efficient and prepared to carry the Nazi state forward through the persecution of their political opponents 14 By the spring of 1934 Himmler s SS controlled the SD and the Gestapo but for him there was still a problem as technically the SS and the Gestapo by proxy was subordinated to the SA which was under the command of Ernst Rohm 15 Himmler wanted to free himself entirely from Rohm whom he viewed as an obstacle 16 Rohm s position was menacing as more than 4 5 million men fell under his command once the militias and veterans organisations were absorbed by the SA 17 a fact which fuelled Rohm s aspirations his dream of fusing the SA and Reichswehr together was undermining Hitler s relationships with the leadership of Germany s armed forces 18 Several Nazi chieftains among them Goring Joseph Goebbels Rudolf Hess and Himmler began a concerted campaign to convince Hitler to take action against Rohm 19 Both the SD and Gestapo released information concerning an imminent putsch by the SA 20 Once persuaded Hitler acted by setting Himmler s SS into action who then proceeded to murder over 100 of Hitler s identified antagonists The Gestapo supplied the information which implicated the SA and ultimately enabled Himmler and Heydrich to emancipate themselves entirely from the organisation 21 For the Gestapo the next two years following the Night of the Long Knives a term describing the putsch against Rohm and the SA were characterised by behind the scenes political wrangling over policing 22 1938 Gestapo border inspection stamp applied when leaving Germany On 17 June 1936 Hitler decreed the unification of all police forces in Germany and named Himmler as Chief of German Police 23 This action effectively merged the police into the SS and removed it from Frick s control Himmler was nominally subordinate to Frick as police chief but as Reichsfuhrer SS he answered only to Hitler This move also gave Himmler operational control over Germany s entire detective force 24 The Gestapo became a national state agency Himmler also gained authority over all of Germany s uniformed law enforcement agencies which were amalgamated into the new Ordnungspolizei Orpo Order Police which became a national agency under SS general Kurt Daluege 23 Shortly thereafter Himmler created the Kriminalpolizei Kripo Criminal Police merging it with the Gestapo into the Sicherheitspolizei SiPo Security Police under Heydrich s command 25 Heinrich Muller was at that time the Gestapo operations chief 26 He answered to Heydrich Heydrich answered only to Himmler and Himmler answered only to Hitler 23 The Gestapo had the authority to investigate cases of treason espionage sabotage and criminal attacks on the Nazi Party and Germany The basic Gestapo law passed by the government in 1936 gave the Gestapo carte blanche to operate without judicial review in effect putting it above the law 27 The Gestapo was specifically exempted from responsibility to administrative courts where citizens normally could sue the state to conform to laws As early as 1935 a Prussian administrative court had ruled that the Gestapo s actions were not subject to judicial review The SS officer Werner Best one time head of legal affairs in the Gestapo 28 summed up this policy by saying As long as the police carries out the will of the leadership it is acting legally 29 On 27 September 1939 the security and police agencies of Nazi Germany with the exception of the Order Police were consolidated into the Reich Security Main Office RSHA headed by Heydrich 30 The Gestapo became Amt IV Department IV of RSHA and Muller became the Gestapo Chief with Heydrich as his immediate superior 31 After Heydrich s 1942 assassination Himmler assumed the leadership of the RSHA until January 1943 when Ernst Kaltenbrunner was appointed chief 32 Muller remained the Gestapo Chief His direct subordinate Adolf Eichmann headed the Gestapo s Office of Resettlement and then its Office of Jewish Affairs Referat IV B4 or Sub Department IV Section B4 33 During the Holocaust Eichmann s department within the Gestapo coordinated the mass deportation of European Jews to the Nazis extermination camps The power of the Gestapo included the use of what was called Schutzhaft protective custody a euphemism for the power to imprison people without judicial proceedings 34 An oddity of the system was that the prisoner had to sign his own Schutzhaftbefehl an order declaring that the person had requested imprisonment presumably out of fear of personal harm In addition political prisoners throughout Germany and from 1941 throughout the occupied territories under the Night and Fog Decree German Nacht und Nebel simply disappeared while in Gestapo custody 35 Up to 30 April 1944 at least 6 639 persons were arrested under Nacht und Nebel orders 36 However the total number of people who disappeared as a result of this decree is not known 37 CounterintelligenceThe Polish government in exile in London during World War II received sensitive military information about Nazi Germany from agents and informants throughout Europe After Germany conquered Poland in the autumn of 1939 Gestapo officials believed that they had neutralised Polish intelligence activities However certain Polish information about the movement of German police and SS units to the East during 1941 German invasion of the Soviet Union was similar to information British intelligence secretly obtained through intercepting and decoding German police and SS messages sent by radio telegraphy 38 In 1942 the Gestapo discovered a cache of Polish intelligence documents in Prague and were surprised to see that Polish agents and informants had been gathering detailed military information and smuggling it out to London via Budapest and Istanbul The Poles identified and tracked German military trains to the Eastern front and identified four Order Police battalions sent to occupied areas of the Soviet Union in October 1941 that engaged in war crimes and mass murder 39 Polish agents also gathered detailed information about the morale of German soldiers in the East After uncovering a sample of the information the Poles had reported Gestapo officials concluded that Polish intelligence activity represented a very serious danger to Germany As late as 6 June 1944 Heinrich Muller concerned about the leakage of information to the Allies set up a special unit called Sonderkommando Jerzy that was meant to root out the Polish intelligence network in western and southwestern Europe 40 In Austria there were groups still loyal to the Habsburgs who unlike most across the Greater German Reich remained determined to resist the Nazis These groups became a special focus of the Gestapo because of their insurrectionist goals the overthrow of the Nazi regime the re establishment of an independent Austria under Habsburg leadership and Hitler s hatred of the Habsburg family Hitler vehemently rejected the centuries old Habsburg pluralist principles of live and let live with regard to ethnic groups peoples minorities religions cultures and languages 41 Habsburg loyalist Karl Burian s who was later executed plan to blow up the Gestapo headquarters in Vienna represented a unique attempt to act aggressively against the Gestapo Burian s group had also set up a secret courier service to Otto von Habsburg in Belgium Individuals in Austrian resistance groups led by Heinrich Maier also managed to pass along the plans and the location of production facilities for V 1 V 2 rockets Tiger tanks and aircraft Messerschmitt Bf 109 Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet etc to the Allies 42 The Maier group informed very early about the mass murder of Jews The resistance group later discovered by the Gestapo because of a double agent of the Abwehr was in contact with Allen Dulles the head of the US Office of Strategic Services in Switzerland Although Maier and the other group members were severely tortured the Gestapo did not uncover the essential involvement of the resistance group in Operation Crossbow and Operation Hydra 43 44 a Suppression of resistance and persecutionEarly in the regime s existence harsh measures were meted out to political opponents and those who resisted Nazi doctrine such as members of the Communist Party of Germany KPD a role originally performed by the SA until the SD and Gestapo undermined their influence and took control of Reich security 45 Because the Gestapo seemed omniscient and omnipotent the atmosphere of fear they created led to an overestimation of their reach and strength a faulty assessment which hampered the operational effectiveness of underground resistance organisations 46 Trade unions Shortly after the Nazis came to power they decided to dissolve the 28 federations of the General German Trade Union Confederation because Hitler after noting their success in the works council elections intended to consolidate all German workers under the Nazi government s administration a decision he made on 7 April 1933 47 As a preface to this action Hitler decreed May 1 as National Labor Day to celebrate German workers a move the trade union leaders welcomed With their trade union flags waving Hitler gave a rousing speech to the 1 5 million people assembled on Berlin s Tempelhofer Feld that was nationally broadcast during which he extolled the nation s revival and working class solidarity 48 On the following day the newly formed Gestapo officers who had been shadowing some 58 trade union leaders arrested them wherever they could find them many in their homes 49 Meanwhile the SA and police occupied trade union headquarters arrested functionaries confiscated their property and assets all by design so as to be replaced on 12 May by the German Labour Front DAF a Nazi organisation placed under the leadership of Robert Ley 50 For their part this was the first time the Gestapo operated under its new name since its 26 April 1933 founding in Prussia 49 Religious dissent Many parts of Germany where religious dissent existed upon the Nazi seizure of power saw a rapid transformation a change as noted by the Gestapo in conservative towns such as Wurzburg where people acquiesced to the regime either through accommodation collaboration or simple compliance 51 Increasing religious objections to Nazi policies led the Gestapo to carefully monitor church organisations For the most part members of the church did not offer political resistance but simply wanted to ensure that organizational doctrine remained intact 52 However the Nazi regime sought to suppress any source of ideology other than its own and set out to muzzle or crush the churches in the so called Kirchenkampf When Church leaders clergy voiced their misgiving about the euthanasia program and Nazi racial policies Hitler intimated that he considered them traitors to the people and went so far as to call them the destroyers of Germany 53 The extreme anti semitism and neo pagan heresies of the Nazis caused some Christians to outright resist 54 and Pope Pius XI to issue the encyclical Mit Brennender Sorge denouncing Nazism and warning Catholics against joining or supporting the Party Some pastors like the Protestant clergyman Dietrich Bonhoeffer paid for their opposition with their lives 55 b In an effort to counter the strength and influence of spiritual resistance Nazi records reveal that the Gestapo s Referat B1 monitored the activities of bishops very closely instructing that agents be set up in every diocese that the bishops reports to the Vatican should be obtained and that the bishops areas of activity must be found out Deans were to be targeted as the eyes and ears of the bishops and a vast network established to monitor the activities of ordinary clergy The importance of this enemy is such that inspectors of security police and of the security service will make this group of people and the questions discussed by them their special concern 57 In Dachau The Official History 1933 1945 Paul Berben wrote that clergy were watched closely and frequently denounced arrested and sent to Nazi concentration camps One priest was imprisoned in Dachau for having stated that there were good folk in England too another suffered the same fate for warning a girl who wanted to marry an S S man after abjuring the Catholic faith yet another because he conducted a service for a deceased communist Others were arrested simply on the basis of being suspected of activities hostile to the State or that there was reason to suppose that his dealings might harm society 58 Over 2 700 Catholic Protestant and Orthodox clergy were imprisoned at Dachau alone After Heydrich who was staunchly anti Catholic and anti Christian was assassinated in Prague his successor Ernst Kaltenbrunner relaxed some of the policies and then disbanded Department IVB religious opponents of the Gestapo 59 Homosexuality Violence and arrest were not confined to that opposing political parties membership in trade unions or those with dissenting religious opinions but also homosexuality It was viewed negatively by Hitler 60 Homosexuals were correspondingly considered a threat to the Volksgemeinschaft National Community 61 From the Nazis rise to national power in 1933 the number of court verdicts against homosexuals steadily increased and only declined once the Second World War started 60 In 1934 a special Gestapo office was set up in Berlin to deal with homosexuality 62 Despite male homosexuality being considered a greater danger to national survival lesbianism was likewise viewed as unacceptable deemed gender nonconformity and a number of individual reports on lesbians can be found in Gestapo files 63 c Between 1933 and 1935 some 4 000 men were arrested between 1936 and 1939 another 30 000 men were convicted 64 If homosexuals showed any signs of sympathy to the Nazis identified racial enemies they were considered an even greater danger 65 According to Gestapo case files the majority of those arrested for homosexuality were males between eighteen and twenty five years of age 62 Student opposition Between June 1942 and March 1943 student protests were calling for an end to the Nazi regime These included the non violent resistance of Hans and Sophie Scholl two leaders of the White Rose student group 66 However resistance groups and those who were in moral or political opposition to the Nazis were stalled by the fear of reprisals from the Gestapo Fearful of an internal overthrow the forces of the Gestapo were unleashed on the opposition Groups like the White Rose and others such as the Edelweiss Pirates and the Swing Youth were placed under close Gestapo observation Some participants were sent to concentration camps Leading members of the most famous of these groups the White Rose were arrested by the police and turned over to the Gestapo For several leaders the punishment was death 67 During the first five months of 1943 the Gestapo arrested thousands suspected of resistance activities and carried out numerous executions Student opposition leaders were executed in late February and a major opposition organisation the Oster Circle was destroyed in April 1943 68 Efforts to resist the Nazi regime amounted to very little and had only minor chances of success particularly since a broad percentage of the German people did not support such actions 69 General opposition and military conspiracy Between 1934 and 1938 opponents of the Nazi regime and their fellow travellers began to emerge Among the first to speak out were religious dissenters but following in their wake were educators aristocratic businessmen office workers teachers and others from nearly every walk of life 70 Most people quickly learned that open opposition was dangerous since Gestapo informants and agents were widespread Yet a significant number of them still worked against the National Socialist government 71 In May 1935 the Gestapo broke up and arrested members of the Markwitz Circle a group of former socialists in contact with Otto Strasser who sought Hitler s downfall 72 From the mid 1930s into the early 1940s various groups made up of communists idealists working class people and far right conservative opposition organisations covertly fought against Hitler s government and several of them fomented plots that included Hitler s assassination Nearly all of them including the Romer Group Robby Group Solf Circle Schwarze Reichswehr the Party of the Radical Middle Class Jungdeutscher Orden Schwarze Front and Stahlhelm were either discovered or infiltrated by the Gestapo This led to corresponding arrests being sent to concentration camps and execution 73 One of the methods employed by the Gestapo to contend with these resistance factions was protective detention which facilitated the process in expediting dissenters to concentration camps and against which there was no legal defence 74 Photograph from 1939 shown from left to right are Franz Josef Huber Arthur Nebe Heinrich Himmler Reinhard Heydrich and Heinrich Muller planning the investigation of the bomb assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on 8 November 1939 in Munich Early efforts to resist the Nazis with aid from abroad were hindered when the opposition s peace feelers to the Western Allies did not meet with success This was partly because of the Venlo incident of 9 November 1939 75 in which SD and Gestapo agents posing as anti Nazis in the Netherlands kidnapped two British Secret Intelligence Service SIS officers after having lured them to a meeting to discuss peace terms This prompted Winston Churchill to ban any further contact with the German opposition 76 Later the British and Americans did not want to deal with anti Nazis because they were fearful that the Soviet Union would believe they were attempting to make deals behind their back d The German opposition was in an unenviable position by the late spring and early summer of 1943 On one hand it was next to impossible for them to overthrow Hitler and the party on the other the Allied demand for an unconditional surrender meant no opportunity for a compromise peace which left the military and conservative aristocrats who opposed the regime no option in their eyes other than continuing the military struggle 78 Despite the fear of the Gestapo after mass arrests and executions in the spring the opposition still plotted and planned One of the more famous schemes Operation Valkyrie involved a number of senior German officers and was carried out by Colonel Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg In an attempt to assassinate Hitler Stauffenberg planted a bomb underneath a conference table inside the Wolf s Lair field headquarters 79 Known as the 20 July plot this assassination attempt failed and Hitler was only slightly injured Reports indicate that the Gestapo was caught unaware of this plot as they did not have sufficient protections in place at the appropriate locations nor did they take any preventative steps 80 81 Stauffenberg and his group were shot on 21 July 1944 meanwhile his fellow conspirators were rounded up by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp Thereafter there was a show trial overseen by Roland Freisler followed by their execution 82 Some Germans were convinced that it was their duty to apply all possible expedients to end the war as quickly as possible Sabotage efforts were undertaken by members of the Abwehr military intelligence leadership as they recruited people known to oppose the Nazi regime 83 The Gestapo cracked down ruthlessly on dissidents in Germany just as they did everywhere else Opposition became more difficult Arrests torture and executions were common Terror against state enemies had become a way of life to such a degree that the Gestapo s presence and methods were eventually normalised in the minds of people living in Nazi Germany 84 OrganisationIn January 1933 Hermann Goring Hitler s minister without portfolio was appointed the head of the Prussian Police and began filling the political and intelligence units of the Prussian Secret Police with Nazi Party members 85 A year after the organisation s inception Goring wrote in a British publication about having created the organisation on his own initiative and how he was chiefly responsible for the elimination of the Marxist and Communist threat to Germany and Prussia 86 Describing the activities of the organisation Goring boasted about the utter ruthlessness required for Germany s recovery the establishment of concentration camps for that purpose and even went on to claim that excesses were committed in the beginning recounting how beatings took place here and there 87 On 26 April 1933 he reorganised the force s Amt III as the Gestapa better known by the sobriquet Gestapo 88 a secret state police intended to serve the Nazi cause 89 Less than two weeks later in early May 1933 the Gestapo moved into their Berlin headquarters at Prinz Albrecht Strasse 8 90 As a result of its 1936 merger with the Kripo National criminal police to form sub units of the Sicherheitspolizei SiPo Security Police the Gestapo was officially classified as a government agency Himmler s subsequent appointment to Chef der Deutschen Polizei Chief of German Police and status as Reichsfuhrer SS made him independent of Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick s nominal control 23 24 The SiPo was placed under the direct command of Reinhard Heydrich who was already chief of the Nazi Party s intelligence service the Sicherheitsdienst SD 23 The idea was to fully identify and integrate the party agency SD with the state agency SiPo Most SiPo members joined the SS and held a rank in both organisations Nevertheless in practice there was jurisdictional overlap and operational conflict between the SD and Gestapo 91 Heinrich Muller Chief of the Gestapo 1939 1945 In September 1939 the SiPo and SD were merged into the newly created Reichssicherheitshauptamt RSHA Reich Security Main Office Both the Gestapo and Kripo became distinct departments within the RSHA 30 Although the Sicherheitspolizei was officially disbanded the term SiPo was figuratively used to describe any RSHA personnel throughout the remainder of the war In lieu of naming convention changes the original construct of the SiPo Gestapo and Kripo cannot be fully comprehended as discrete entities since they ultimately formed a conglomerate in which each was wedded to each other and the SS through its Security Service the SD 92 The creation of the RSHA represented the formalisation at the top level of the relationship under which the SD served as the intelligence agency for the security police A similar co ordination existed in the local offices Within Germany and areas which were incorporated within the Reich for the purpose of civil administration local offices of the Gestapo criminal police and SD were formally separate They were subject to co ordination by inspectors of the security police and SD on the staffs of the local higher SS and police leaders however and one of the principal functions of the local SD units was to serve as the intelligence agency for the local Gestapo units In the occupied territories the formal relationship between local units of the Gestapo criminal police and SD was slightly closer 93 The Gestapo became known as RSHA Amt IV Department or Office IV with Heinrich Muller as its chief 31 In January 1943 Himmler appointed Ernst Kaltenbrunner RSHA chief almost seven months after Heydrich had been assassinated 32 The specific internal departments of Amt IV were as follows 94 Department A Political Opponents Communists A1 Counter sabotage A2 Reactionaries liberals and opposition A3 Protective services A4 Department B Sects and Churches Catholicism B1 Protestantism B2 Freemasons and other churches B3 Jewish affairs B4 Department C Administration and Party Affairs central administrative office of the Gestapo responsible for card files of all personnel including all officials Files card indexes information and administration C1 Protective custody C2 Press office C3 NSDAP matters C4 Department D Occupied Territories administration for regions outside the Reich Protectorate affairs Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia regions of Yugoslavia Greece D1 1st Belgrade Special Combat detachment General Government D2 Confidential office hostile foreigners emigrants D3 Occupied territories France Belgium Holland Norway Denmark D4 Occupied Eastern territories D5 Department E Security and counterintelligence In the Reich E1 Policy and economic formation E2 West E3 Scandinavia North E4 East E5 South E6 In 1941 Referat N the central command office of the Gestapo was formed However these internal departments remained and the Gestapo continued to be a department under the RSHA umbrella The local offices of the Gestapo known as Gestapo Leitstellen and Stellen answered to a local commander known as the Inspekteur der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD Inspector of the Security Police and Security Service who in turn was under the dual command of Referat N of the Gestapo and also his local SS and Police Leader 95 96 In total there were some fifty four regional Gestapo offices across the German federal states 97 The Gestapo also maintained offices at all Nazi concentration camps held an office on the staff of the SS and Police Leaders and supplied personnel as needed to formations such as the Einsatzgruppen 98 Personnel assigned to these auxiliary duties were often removed from the Gestapo chain of command and fell under the authority of branches of the SS 99 It was the Gestapo chief SS Brigadierfuhrer Heinrich Muller who kept Hitler abreast of the killing operations in the Soviet Union and who issued orders to the four Einsatzgruppen that their continual work in the east was to be presented to the Fuhrer 100 Female Criminal Investigation Career According to regulations issued by the Reich Security Main Office in 1940 women who had been trained in social work or having a similar education could be hired as female detectives Female youth leaders lawyers business administrators with experience in social work female leaders in the Reichsarbeitsdienst and personnel administrators in the Bund Deutscher Madel were hired as detectives after a one year course if they had several years professional experience Later nurses kindergarten teachers and trained female commercial employees with an aptitude for police work were hired as female detectives after a two year course as Kriminaloberassistentin and could promote to a Kriminalsekretarin After another two or three years in that grade the female detective could advance to Kriminalobersekretarin Further promotions to Kriminalkommissarin and Kriminalratin were also possible 101 Membership Gestapo members in Klatovy German occupied Czechoslovakia In 1933 there was no purge of the German police forces 102 The vast majority of Gestapo officers came from the police forces of the Weimar Republic members of the SS the SA and the NSDAP also joined the Gestapo but were less numerous 102 By March 1937 the Gestapo employed an estimated 6 500 people in fifty four regional offices across the Reich 103 Additional staff were added in March 1938 consequent the annexation of Austria and again in October 1938 with the acquisition of the Sudetenland 103 In 1939 only 3 000 out of the total of 20 000 Gestapo men held SS ranks and in most cases these were honorary 104 One man who served in the Prussian Gestapo in 1933 recalled that most of his co workers were by no means Nazis For the most part they were young professional civil service officers 104 The Nazis valued police competence more than politics so in general in 1933 almost all of the men who served in the various state police forces under the Weimar Republic stayed on in their jobs 105 In Wurzburg which is one of the few places in Germany where most of the Gestapo records survived every member of the Gestapo was a career policeman or had a police background 106 The Canadian historian Robert Gellately wrote that most Gestapo men were not Nazis but at the same time were not opposed to the Nazi regime which they were willing to serve in whatever task they were called upon to perform 106 Over time membership in the Gestapo included ideological training particularly once Werner Best assumed a leading role for training in April 1936 Employing biological metaphors Best emphasised a doctrine which encouraged members of the Gestapo to view themselves as doctors to the national body in the struggle against pathogens and diseases among the implied sicknesses were communists Freemasons and the churches and above and behind all these stood the Jews 107 Heydrich thought along similar lines and advocated both defensive and offensive measures on the part of the Gestapo so as to prevent any subversion or destruction of the National Socialist body 108 Whether trained as police originally or not Gestapo agents themselves were shaped by their socio political environment Historian George C Browder contends that there was a four part process authorisation bolstering routinisation and dehumanisation in effect which legitimised the psycho social atmosphere conditioning members of the Gestapo to radicalised violence 109 Browder also describes a sandwich effect where from above Gestapo agents were subjected to ideologically oriented racism and criminal biological theories and from below the Gestapo was transformed by SS personnel who did not have the proper police training which showed in their propensity for unrestrained violence 110 This admixture certainly shaped the Gestapo s public image which they sought to maintain despite their increasing workload an image which helped them identify and eliminate enemies of the Nazi state 111 Population ratios methods and effectivenessContrary to popular belief the Gestapo was not the all pervasive omnipotent agency in German society 112 In Germany proper many towns and cities had fewer than 50 official Gestapo personnel For example in 1939 Stettin and Frankfurt am Main only had a total of 41 Gestapo men combined 112 In Dusseldorf the local Gestapo office of only 281 men were responsible for the entire Lower Rhine region which comprised 4 million people 113 V men as undercover Gestapo agents were known were used to infiltrate Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD and Communist opposition groups but this was more the exception than the rule 114 The Gestapo office in Saarbrucken had 50 full term informers in 1939 114 The District Office in Nuremberg which had the responsibility for all of northern Bavaria employed a total of 80 100 full term informers between 1943 and 1945 114 The majority of Gestapo informers were not full term employees working undercover but were rather ordinary citizens who chose to denounce other people to the Gestapo 115 According to Canadian historian Robert Gellately s analysis of the local offices established the Gestapo was for the most part made up of bureaucrats and clerical workers who depended upon denunciations by citizens for their information Gellately argued that it was because of the widespread willingness of Germans to inform on each other to the Gestapo that Germany between 1933 and 1945 was a prime example of panopticism 116 The Gestapo at times was overwhelmed with denunciations and most of its time was spent sorting out the credible from the less credible denunciations 117 Many of the local offices were understaffed and overworked struggling with the paper load caused by so many denunciations 118 Gellately has also suggested that the Gestapo was a reactive organisation constructed within German society and whose functioning was structurally dependent on the continuing co operation of German citizens 119 After 1939 when many Gestapo personnel were called up for war related work such as service with the Einsatzgruppen the level of overwork and understaffing at the local offices increased 118 For information about what was happening in German society the Gestapo continued to be mostly dependent upon denunciations 120 80 of all Gestapo investigations were started in response to information provided by denunciations by ordinary Germans while 10 were started in response to information provided by other branches of the German government and another 10 started in response to information that the Gestapo itself unearthed 117 The information supplied by denunciations often led the Gestapo in determining who was arrested 120 The popular picture of the Gestapo with its spies everywhere terrorising German society has been rejected by many historians as a myth invented after the war as a cover for German society s widespread complicity in allowing the Gestapo to work 120 121 Work done by social historians such as Detlev Peukert Robert Gellately Reinhard Mann Inge Marssolek Rene Otto Klaus Michael Mallmann and Paul Gerhard which by focusing on what the local offices were doing has shown the Gestapo s almost total dependence on denunciations from ordinary Germans and very much discredited the older Big Brother picture with the Gestapo having its eyes and ears everywhere 122 For example of the 84 cases in Wurzburg of Rassenschande race defilement sexual relations with non Aryans 45 54 were started in response to denunciations by ordinary people two 2 by information provided by other branches of the government 20 24 via information gained during interrogations of people relating to other matters four 5 from information from Nazi NSDAP organisations two 2 during political evaluations and 11 13 have no source listed while none were started by Gestapo s own observations of the people of Wurzburg 123 An examination of 213 denunciations in Dusseldorf showed that 37 were motivated by personal conflicts no motive could be established in 39 and 24 were motivated by support for the Nazi regime 124 The Gestapo always showed a special interest in denunciations concerning sexual matters especially cases concerning Rassenschande with Jews or between Germans and foreigners in particular Polish slave workers the Gestapo applied even harsher methods to the foreign workers in the country especially those from Poland 125 Jews Catholics and homosexuals 126 As time went by anonymous denunciations to the Gestapo caused trouble to various NSDAP officials who often found themselves being investigated by the Gestapo 127 Of the political cases 61 people were investigated for suspicion of belonging to the KPD 44 for the SPD and 69 for other political parties 128 Most of the political investigations took place between 1933 and 1935 with the all time high of 57 cases in 1935 128 After that year political investigations declined with only 18 investigations in 1938 13 in 1939 two in 1941 seven in 1942 four in 1943 and one in 1944 128 The other category associated with non conformity included everything from a man who drew a caricature of Hitler to a Catholic teacher suspected of being lukewarm about teaching National Socialism in his classroom 128 The administrative control category concerned those who were breaking the law concerning residency in the city 128 The conventional criminality category concerned economic crimes such as money laundering smuggling and homosexuality 129 Normal methods of investigation included various forms of blackmail threats and extortion to secure confessions 130 Beyond that sleep deprivation and various forms of harassment were used as investigative methods 130 Failing that torture and planting evidence were common methods of resolving a case especially if the case concerned someone Jewish 131 Brutality on the part of interrogators often prompted by denunciations and followed with roundups enabled the Gestapo to uncover numerous resistance networks it also made them seem like they knew everything and could do anything they wanted 132 While the total number of Gestapo officials was limited when contrasted against the represented populations the average Volksgenosse Nazi term for the member of the German people was typically not under observation so the statistical ratio between Gestapo officials and inhabitants is largely worthless and of little significance according to some recent scholars 133 As historian Eric Johnson remarked The Nazi terror was selective terror with its focus upon political opponents ideological dissenters clergy and religious organisations career criminals the Sinti and Roma population handicapped persons homosexuals and above all upon the Jews 134 Selective terror by the Gestapo as mentioned by Johnson is also supported by historian Richard Evans who states that Violence and intimidation rarely touched the lives of most ordinary Germans Denunciation was the exception not the rule as far as the behaviour of the vast majority of Germans was concerned 135 The involvement of ordinary Germans in denunciations also needs to be put into perspective so as not to exonerate the Gestapo As Evans makes clear it was not the ordinary German people who engaged in surveillance it was the Gestapo nothing happened until the Gestapo received a denunciation and it was the Gestapo s active pursuit of deviance and dissent that was the only thing that gave denunciations meaning 136 The Gestapo s effectiveness remained in the ability to project omnipotence they co opted the assistance of the German population by using denunciations to their advantage proving in the end a powerful ruthless and effective organ of terror under the Nazi regime that was seemingly everywhere 137 Lastly the Gestapo s effectiveness while aided by denunciations and the watchful eye of ordinary Germans was more the result of the co ordination and co operation amid the various police organs within Germany the assistance of the SS and the support provided by the various Nazi Party organisations all of them together forming an organised persecution network 138 Operations in Nazi occupied territoriesAs an instrument of Nazi power terror and repression the Gestapo operated throughout occupied Europe 139 Much like their affiliated organisations the SS and the SD the Gestapo played a leading part in enslaving and deporting workers from occupied territory torturing and executing civilians singling out and murdering Jews and subjecting Allied prisoners of war to terrible treatment 140 To this end the Gestapo was a vital component both in Nazi repression and the Holocaust 141 Once the German armies advanced into enemy territory they were accompanied by Einsatzgruppen staffed by officers from the Gestapo and Kripo who usually operated in the rear areas to administer and police the occupied land 142 Whenever a region came fully under German military occupational jurisdiction the Gestapo administered all executive actions under the military commander s authority albeit operating relatively independent of it 142 Occupation meant administration and policing a duty assigned to the SS the SD and the Gestapo even before hostilities began as was the case for Czechoslovakia 143 Correspondingly Gestapo offices were established in a territory once occupied 103 e Some locals aided the Gestapo whether as professional police auxiliaries or in other duties Nonetheless operations performed either by German members of the Gestapo or auxiliaries from willing collaborators of other nationalities were inconsistent in both disposition and effectiveness Varying degrees of pacification and police enforcement measures were necessary in each place dependent on how cooperative or resistant the locals were to Nazi mandates and racial policies 144 Throughout the Eastern territories the Gestapo and other Nazi organisations co opted the assistance of indigenous police units nearly all of whom were uniformed and able to carry out drastic actions 145 Many of the auxiliary police personnel operating on behalf of German Order Police the SD and Gestapo were members of the Schutzmannschaft which included staffing by Ukrainians Belorussians Russians Estonians Lithuanians and Latvians 146 While in many countries the Nazis occupied in the East the local domestic police forces supplemented German operations noted Holocaust historian Raul Hilberg asserts that those of Poland were least involved in anti Jewish actions 145 Nonetheless German authorities ordered the mobilisation of reserve Polish police forces known as the Blue Police which strengthened the Nazi police presence and carried out numerous police functions in some cases its functionaries even identified and rounded up Jews or performed other unsavory duties on behalf of their German masters 147 In places like Denmark there were some 550 uniformed Danes in Copenhagen working with the Gestapo patrolling and terrorising the local population at the behest of their German overseers many of whom were arrested after the war 148 Other Danish civilians like in many places across Europe acted as Gestapo informants but this should not be seen as wholehearted support for the Nazi program as motives for cooperation varied 149 Whereas in France the number of members in the Carlingue French Gestapo who worked on behalf of the Nazis was upwards of 30 000 to 32 000 they conducted operations nearly indistinguishable from their German equivalents 150 Nuremberg trialsMain articles Nuremberg trials and the Holocaust Gestapo building at Prinz Albrecht Strasse 8 after the 1945 bombing Between 14 November 1945 and 3 October 1946 the Allies established an International Military Tribunal IMT to try 22 major Nazi war criminals and six groups for crimes against peace war crimes and crimes against humanity 151 152 Nineteen of the 22 were convicted and twelve Martin Bormann in absentia Hans Frank Wilhelm Frick Hermann Goring Alfred Jodl Ernst Kaltenbrunner Wilhelm Keitel Joachim von Ribbentrop Alfred Rosenberg Fritz Sauckel Arthur Seyss Inquart Julius Streicher were given the death penalty Three Walther Funk Rudolf Hess Erich Raeder received life terms and the remaining four Karl Donitz Konstantin von Neurath Albert Speer and Baldur von Schirach received shorter prison sentences Three others Hans Fritzsche Hjalmar Schacht and Franz von Papen were acquitted At that time the Gestapo was condemned as a criminal organisation along with the SS 93 However Gestapo leader Heinrich Muller was never tried as he disappeared at the end of the war 153 f German Gestapo agents arrested after the liberation of Liege Belgium are pictured in a cell at the Citadel of Liege October 1944 Leaders organisers investigators and accomplices participating in the formulation or execution of a common plan or conspiracy to commit the crimes specified were declared responsible for all acts performed by any persons in execution of such plan The official positions of defendants as heads of state or holders of high government offices were not to free them from responsibility or mitigate their punishment nor was the fact that a defendant acted pursuant to an order of a superior to excuse him from responsibility although it might be considered by the IMT in mitigation of punishment 93 At the trial of any individual member of any group or organisation the IMT was authorised to declare in connection with any act of which the individual was convicted that the group or organisation to which he belonged was a criminal organisation When a group or organisation was thus declared criminal the competent national authority of any signatory had the right to bring persons to trial for membership in that organisation with the criminal nature of the group or organisation assumed proved 154 The IMT subsequently convicted three of the groups the Nazi leadership corps the SS including the SD and the Gestapo Gestapo members Hermann Goring Ernst Kaltenbrunner and Arthur Seyss Inquart were individually convicted While three groups were acquitted of collective war crimes charges this did not relieve individual members of those groups from conviction and punishment under the denazification programme Members of the three convicted groups however were subject to apprehension by Britain the United States the Soviet Union and France 155 These groups the Nazi Party and government leadership the German General staff and High Command OKW the Sturmabteilung SA the Schutzstaffel SS including the Sicherheitsdienst SD and the Gestapo had an aggregate membership exceeding two million making a large number of their members liable to trial when the organisations were convicted 156 AftermathSee also Ratlines World War II aftermath In 1997 Cologne transformed the former regional Gestapo headquarters in Cologne the EL DE Haus into a museum to document the Gestapo s actions 157 After the war U S Counterintelligence Corps employed the former Lyon Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie for his anti communist efforts and also helped him escape to Bolivia 158 LeadershipNo Portrait Chief Took office Left office Time in office1 Diels Rudolf Rudolf Diels 1900 1957 26 April 193320 April 193411 months2 Heydrich Reinhard Reinhard Heydrich 1904 1942 22 April 193427 September 19395 years 5 months3 Muller Heinrich Heinrich Muller 1900 1945 27 September 1939May 1945 5 years 7 monthsPrincipal agents and officersHeinrich Baab SiPo SD Frankfurt Klaus Barbie SiPo SD Lyon Werner Best SiPo SD Copenhagen Karl Bomelburg Head of Gestapo Southern France Theodor Dannecker SiPo SD Paris Rudolf Diels Gestapo Chief 1933 1934 Adolf Eichmann RSHA Berlin Gerhard Flesch Hermann Goring Founder of the Gestapo Viktor Harnischfeger Dusseldorf Gestapo Criminal Commissar Reinhard Heydrich SD SiPo Gestapo Chief 1934 1939 RSHA Chief 1939 1942 Heinrich Himmler Reichsfuhrer SS Ernst Kaltenbrunner RSHA Chief 1943 1945 Herbert Kappler SD Chief Rome Werner Knab Helmut Knochen Paris Kurt Lischka Paris Ernst Misselwitz Hauptscharfuhrer SiPo SD Paris Heinrich Muller Gestapo Chief 1939 1945 Karl Oberg Paris Pierre Paoli Head of Gestapo Central France Oswald Poche Chief of Frankfurt Lindenstrasse station Henry Rinnan Norwegian agent Karl Eberhard Schongarth Max WielenRanks and uniformsThe Gestapo was a secretive plainclothes agency and agents typically wore civilian suits There were strict protocols protecting the identity of Gestapo field personnel When asked for identification an operative was required only to present his warrant disc and not a picture identification This disc identified the operative as a member of the Gestapo without revealing personal information except when ordered to do so by an authorised official 159 Leitstellung district office staff did wear the grey SS service uniform but with police pattern shoulderboards and SS rank insignia on the left collar patch The right collar patch was black without the sig runes The SD sleeve diamond SD Raute insignia was worn on the lower left sleeve even by SiPo men who were not in the SD Uniforms worn by Gestapo men assigned to the Einsatzgruppen in occupied territories were at first indistinguishable from the Waffen SS field uniform Complaints from the Waffen SS led to a change of rank insignia shoulder boards from those of the Waffen SS to those of the Ordnungspolizei 160 The Gestapo maintained police detective ranks which were used for all officers both those who were and who were not concurrently SS members g Junior career Senior career Orpo equivalent SS equivalentKriminalassistentanwarter Wachtmeister UnterscharfuhrerKriminalassistent Oberwachtmeister ScharfuhrerKriminaloberassistent Revieroberwachtmeister OberscharfuhrerKriminalsekretar Hauptwachtmeister HauptscharfuhrerMeister SturmscharfuhrerKriminalobersekretar HilfskriminalkommissarKriminalkommissar auf Probeapl Kriminalkommissar Leutnant UntersturmfuhrerKriminalinspektor Kriminalkommissar with less than three years in that rank Oberleutnant ObersturmfuhrerKriminalrat with less than three years in that rank Hauptmann HauptsturmfuhrerKriminalratKriminaldirektorRegierungs und Kriminalrat Major SturmbannfuhrerOberregierungs und Kriminalrat Oberstleutnant ObersturmbannfuhrerRegierungs und KriminaldirektorReichskriminaldirektor Oberst StandartenfuhrerOberfuhrerJunior career einfacher Vollzugsdienst der Sicherheitspolizei Laufbahn U 18 SS Unterfuhrer der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD Senior career leitender Vollzugsdienst der Sicherheitspolizei Laufbahn XIV SS Fuhrer der Sicherheitspolizei und des SD Sources 161 Rank insigniaSicherheitspolizei Rank insignia SicherheitsdienstKriminalassistent SS ScharfuhrerKriminaloberassistent SS OberscharfuhrerKriminalsekretar SS HauptscharfuhrerKriminalobersekretar SS UntersturmfuhrerKriminalinspektor SS ObersturmfuhrerKriminalkommissar SS HauptsturmfuhrerKriminalrat with more than three years in the grade SS SturmbannfuhrerKriminaldirektorRegierungs und KriminalratOberregierungs und Kriminalrat SS ObersturmbannfuhrerRegierungs und Kriminaldirektor SS StandartenfuhrerReichskriminaldirektor SS OberfuhrerSource 162 See alsoGeheime FeldpolizeiInformational notes Operation Crossbow was one preliminary missions for Operation Overlord See Operation Crossbow Preliminary missions for the Operation Overlord Bonhoeffer was an active opponent of Nazism in the German resistance movement Arrested by the Gestapo in 1943 he was sent to Buchenwald and later to Flossenburg concentration camp where he was executed 56 The stricter laws did not apply to lesbians as their behaviour was never officially criminalised even though their behaviours were labelled deviant 64 More than that the Anglo American common language and capital interests kept Stalin at a distance since he felt the other Allied powers were hoping the fascists and Communists would destroy one another 77 Petschek Palace was the Gestapo headquarters in Prague See for instance the following article in Radio Prague International https english radio cz petscheks palace once headquarters nazi secret police 8575365 There were reports that Muller ended up in the foreign secret service at Washington D C some allege he was in Moscow working for the Soviets still others claimed he escaped to South America but none of the myths have ever been proven all of which adds to the mysterious power of the Gestapo 153 Although an agent in uniform wore the collar insignia of the equivalent SS rank he was still addressed as e g Herr Kriminalrat not Sturmbannfuhrer The stock character of the Gestapo Major usually dressed in the prewar black SS uniform is a figment of Hollywood s imagination Citations Gellately 1992 p 44 Wallbaum 2009 p 43 Childers 2017 p 235 Buchheim 1968 p 145 Buchheim 1968 p 146 Flaherty 2004 pp 64 65 Shirer 1990 p 270 Miller 2006 p 433 Flaherty 2004 pp 64 66 Flaherty 2004 p 66 Evans 2005 p 54 Williams 2001 p 61 Tuchel amp Schattenfroh 1987 p 80 Tuchel amp Schattenfroh 1987 pp 82 83 Delarue 2008 pp 102 103 Evans 2006 p 29 Benz 2007 p 50 Burleigh 2000 p 159 Benz 2007 p 51 Benz 2007 p 53 Dams amp Stolle 2014 pp 14 15 Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 15 a b c d e Williams 2001 p 77 a b Longerich 2012 p 204 Longerich 2012 p 201 Weale 2010 p 132 Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 17 McNab 2009 p 156 Shirer 1990 p 271 a b Longerich 2012 pp 469 470 a b Weale 2010 p 131 a b Longerich 2012 p 661 Weale 2010 p 145 USHMM Law and Justice in the Third Reich Snyder 1994 p 242 Gruchmann 1981 p 395 Manchester 2003 p 519 Smith 2004 pp 262 274 US National Archives German Police Records Opened at the National Archives Breitman 2005 p 139 Boeckl Klamper Mang amp Neugebauer 2018 pp 299 305 Broucek 2008 p 414 Thurner 2017 p 187 Boeckl Klamper Mang amp Neugebauer 2018 p 300 Delarue 2008 pp 126 140 Merson 1985 p 50 Longerich 2019 pp 311 312 Longerich 2019 p 312 a b Delarue 2008 p 21 Longerich 2019 pp 312 313 Gellately 1992 pp 94 100 McDonough 2005 pp 30 40 Schmid 1947 pp 61 63 Benz 2007 pp 42 47 McDonough 2005 pp 32 33 Burleigh 2000 p 727 Berben 1975 pp 141 142 Berben 1975 p 142 Steigmann Gall 2003 pp 251 252 a b Gellately 2020 p 176 McDonough 2017 p 160 a b McDonough 2017 p 181 Gellately 2020 pp 176 177 a b McDonough 2017 p 180 Gellately 2020 p 177 McDonough 2005 pp 21 29 Williamson 2002 pp 118 119 Delarue 2008 p 318 Johnson 1999 p 306 Hoffmann 1977 p 28 Hoffmann 1977 pp 29 30 Hoffmann 1977 p 30 Hoffmann 1977 pp 30 32 Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 58 Hoffmann 1977 p 121 Reitlinger 1989 p 144 Overy 1997 pp 245 281 Hildebrand 1984 pp 86 87 Benz 2007 pp 245 249 Reitlinger 1989 p 323 Hohne 2001 p 532 Hohne 2001 p 537 Spielvogel 1992 p 256 Peukert 1989 pp 198 199 McNab 2009 p 150 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 p 97 Manvell amp Fraenkel 2011 pp 97 98 Weale 2012 p 85 McNab 2009 pp 150 162 Tuchel amp Schattenfroh 1987 p 72 Weale 2010 pp 134 135 Browder 1996 p 103 a b c Avalon Project Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression McNab 2009 pp 160 161 McNab 2009 p 47 Buchheim 1968 pp 146 147 McDonough 2017 p 49 McDonough 2017 p 48 49 230 233 State of Israel 1992 p 69 Kershaw 2008 p 671 Ahlers 2001 pp 33 36 a b Gellately 1992 p 50 a b c Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 34 a b Gellately 1992 p 51 Gellately 1992 pp 54 55 a b Gellately 1992 p 59 Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 30 Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 31 Browder 1996 pp 33 34 Browder 1996 pp 88 90 Hohne 2001 pp 186 193 a b McNab 2009 p 163 Mallmann amp Paul 1994 p 174 a b c Mallmann amp Paul 1994 p 181 Gellately 1992 pp 132 150 Gellately 1992 pp 11 12 22 a b Rees 1997 p 65 a b Mallmann amp Paul 1994 p 175 Gellately 1992 p 136 a b c Rees 1997 p 64 Mallmann amp Paul 1994 pp 168 169 Mallmann amp Paul 1994 pp 172 173 Gellately 1992 p 162 Gellately 1992 p 146 Gellately 1992 p 259 Gellately 1992 pp 49 146 Gellately 1992 pp 151 152 a b c d e Gellately 1992 p 48 Gellately 1992 p 49 a b Gellately 1992 p 131 Gellately 1992 p 132 Aycoberry 1999 p 272 Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 35 Johnson 1999 pp 483 485 Evans 2006 p 114 Evans 2006 p 115 Delarue 2008 pp 83 140 Dams amp Stolle 2014 p 82 Lemkin 2008 pp 15 17 Russell 2002 p 7 USHMM Gestapo a b Russell 2002 p 10 Crankshaw 2002 pp 147 148 Hesse Kufeke amp Sander 2010 pp 177 179 350 352 a b Hilberg 1992 p 92 Hilberg 1992 p 93 Skibinska 2012 pp 84 88 89 94 106 Holbraad 2017 pp 46 47 Holbraad 2017 p 47 Rajsfus 1995 pp 51 52 Bernstein 1947 pp 267 275 Evans 2010 pp 741 743 a b Dams amp Stolle 2014 pp 176 177 Bernstein 1947 pp 246 259 Dams amp Stolle 2014 pp 158 161 Dams amp Stolle 2014 pp 159 161 The National Socialist Document Center of Cologne Bonisch amp Wiegrefe 2011 Frei 1993 pp 106 107 Mollo 1992 pp 33 36 Banach 2013 p 64 Mollo 1992 pp 38 39 54 BibliographyAhlers Sieglinde 2001 Frauen in der Polizei In Doris Freer ed Von Griet zu Emma Beitrage zur Geschichte von Frauen in Duisburg vom Mittelalter bis heute PDF Duisburg 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Judgment The Story of Nuremberg New York Boni amp Gaer ISBN 978 1 163 16417 4 Boeckl Klamper Elisabeth Mang Thomas Neugebauer Wolfgang 2018 Gestapo Leitstelle Wien 1938 1945 in German Wien Edition Steinbauer ISBN 978 3 90249 483 2 Bonisch Georg Wiegrefe Klaus 2011 From Nazi to Criminal to Post War Spy German Intelligence Hired Klaus Barbie as Agent 20 January 2011 Der Spiegel Breitman Richard 2005 U S Intelligence and the Nazis Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61794 9 Broucek Peter 2008 Militarischer Widerstand Studien zur osterreichischen Staatsgesinnung und NS Abwehr in German Wien Bohlau ISBN 978 3 20577 728 1 Browder George C 1996 Hitler s Enforcers The Gestapo and the SS Security Service in the Nazi Revolution Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820297 4 Buchheim Hans 1968 The SS Instrument of Domination In Krausnick Helmut Buchheim Hans Broszat Martin Jacobsen Hans Adolf eds Anatomy of the SS State New York Walker and Company 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State 1933 1945 Cambridge MA Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 18507 9 Gellately Robert 1992 The Gestapo and German Society Enforcing Racial Policy 1933 1945 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820297 4 Gellately Robert 2020 Hitler s True Believers How Ordinary People Became Nazis Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19068 990 2 Gerwarth Robert 2012 Hitler s Hangman The Life of Heydrich New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18772 4 Gruchmann Lothar 1981 Nacht und Nebel Justiz Die Mitwirkung deutscher Strafgerichte an der Bekampfung des Widerstandes in den besetzten westeuropaischen Landern 1942 1944 Vierteljahrshefte fur Zeitgeschichte in German Munich Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag GmbH 29 3 342 396 JSTOR 30195217 Hesse Klaus Kufeke Kay Sander Andreas 2010 Topography of Terror Gestapo SS and Reich Security Main Office on Wilhelm and Prinz Alberecht Strasse A Documentation Berlin Stiftung Topographie des Terrors ISBN 978 3 94177 207 6 Hilberg Raul 1992 Perpetrators Victims Bystanders The Jewish Catastrophe 1933 1945 New York Harper Collins ISBN 0 8419 0910 5 Hildebrand Klaus 1984 The Third Reich London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 04 943033 4 Hoffmann Peter 1977 The History of the German Resistance 1933 1945 Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 08088 0 Hohne Heinz 2001 The Order of the Death s Head The Story of Hitler s SS New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 0 14 139012 3 Holbraad Carsten 2017 Danish Reactions to German Occupation London UCL Press ISBN 978 1 91130 751 8 Johnson Eric 1999 Nazi Terror The Gestapo Jews and Ordinary Germans New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 04908 0 Kershaw Ian 2008 Hitler A Biography New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 39306 757 6 Krausnick Helmut et al 1968 Anatomy of the SS State New York Walker and Company ISBN 978 0 00 211026 6 Lemkin Raphael 2008 Axis Rule in Occupied Europe Laws of Occupation Analysis of Government Proposals for Redress Clark NJ Lawbook Exchange Ltd ISBN 978 1 58477 901 8 Longerich Peter 2012 Heinrich Himmler A Life Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 959232 6 Longerich Peter 2019 Hitler A Biography Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19251 574 2 Mallmann Klaus Michael Paul Gerhard 1994 Omniscient Omnipotent Omnipresent Gestapo Society and Resistance In David Crew ed Nazism and German Society 1933 1945 New York and London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 08240 2 Manchester William 2003 The Arms of Krupp 1587 1968 The Rise and Fall of the Industrial Dynasty that Armed Germany at War New York amp Boston Back Bay Books Manvell Roger Fraenkel Heinrich 2011 Goering New York Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 61608 109 6 McDonough Frank 2005 Opposition and Resistance in Nazi Germany Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 00358 2 McDonough Frank 2017 The Gestapo The Myth and Reality of Hitler s Secret Police New York Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 51071 465 6 McNab Chris 2009 The SS 1923 1945 Amber Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 906626 49 5 Merson Allan 1985 Communist Resistance in Nazi Germany New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 85315 601 7 Miller Michael 2006 Leaders of the SS and German Police Vol 1 R James Bender Publishing ISBN 978 93 297 0037 2 Mollo Andrew 1992 Uniforms of the SS Vol 5 Sicherheitsdienst und Sicherheitspolizei 1931 1945 London Windrow amp Greene ISBN 978 1 87200 462 4 Museenkoeln de NSDOK NS Dokumentationszentrum der Stadt Koln Retrieved 30 April 2019 Overy Richard 1997 Why the Allies Won New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 31619 3 Padfield Peter 2001 1990 Himmler Reichsfuhrer SS London Cassel amp Co ISBN 978 0 304 35839 7 Peukert Detlev 1989 Inside Nazi Germany Conformity Opposition and Racism in Everyday Life New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 04480 5 Rajsfus Maurice 1995 La police de Vichy les forces de l ordre francaises au service de la Gestapo 1940 1944 The Vichy Police Force The French Security Forces in the Service of the Gestapo 1940 1944 in French Paris Le cherche midi editeur ISBN 978 2 86274 358 5 Rees Laurence 1997 The Nazis A Warning from History New York New Press ISBN 978 0 563 49333 4 Reitlinger Gerald 1989 The SS Alibi of a Nation 1922 1945 New York Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80351 2 Russell Edward Frederick Langley 2002 The Scourge of the Swastika A History of Nazi War Crimes During World War II New York Skyhorse ISBN 1 85367 498 2 Schmid Heinrich 1947 Apokalyptisches Wetterleuchten Ein Beitrag der Evangelischen Kirche zum Kampf im Dritten Reich in German Munchen Verag der Evangelisch Lutherischen Kirche in Bayern ASIN B00279MGQS Shirer William 1990 The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich New York MJF Books ISBN 978 1 56731 163 1 Smith Michael 2004 Bletchley Park and the Holocaust Intelligence and National Security 19 2 262 274 doi 10 1080 0268452042000302994 S2CID 154692491 Skibinska Alina 2012 Perpetrators Self Portrait The Accused Village Administrators Commune Heads Fire Chiefs Forest Rangers and Gamekeepers In Jan Gross ed The Holocaust in Occupied Poland New Findings and New Interpretations Frankfurt am Main Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 63163 124 9 Snyder Louis 1994 1976 Encyclopedia of the Third Reich Da Capo Press ISBN 978 1 56924 917 8 Spielvogel Jackson 1992 Hitler and Nazi Germany A History New York Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 393182 2 State of Israel 1992 The Trial of Adolf Eichmann Record of Proceedings in the District Court of Jerusalem Vol 1 Jerusalem State of Israel Ministry of Justice 1992 ISBN 978 9 65279 010 1 Steigmann Gall Richard 2003 The Holy Reich Nazi Conceptions of Christianity 1919 1945 New York and London Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82371 5 Thurner Christoph 2017 The CASSIA Spy Ring in World War II Austria A History of the OSS s Maier Messner Group Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 978 1 47662 991 9 Tuchel Johannes Schattenfroh Reinhold 1987 Zentrale des Terrors Prinz Albrecht Strasse 8 Hauptquartier der Gestapo in German Frankfurt am Main Olten and Wien Buchergilde Gutenberg ISBN 978 3 7632 3340 3 USHMM Gestapo United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Holocaust Encyclopedia Retrieved 10 August 2017 USHMM Law and Justice in the Third Reich United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Holocaust Encyclopedia Retrieved 10 August 2017 US National Archives 2000 Press Release nr00 52 German Police Records Opened at the National Archives United States National Archives Retrieved 5 March 2014 Wallbaum Klaus 2009 Der Uberlaufer Rudolf Diels 1900 1957 der erste Gestapo Chef des Hitler Regimes in German Frankfurt am Main Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 631 59818 4 Weale Adrian 2010 The SS A New History London Little Brown ISBN 978 1 4087 0304 5 Weale Adrian 2012 Army of Evil A History of the SS New York Caliber Printing ISBN 978 0 451 23791 0 Williams Max 2001 Reinhard Heydrich The Biography Volume 1 Church Stretton Ulric ISBN 978 0 9537577 5 6 Williamson David 2002 The Third Reich 3rd ed London Longman Publishers ISBN 978 0 582 36883 5 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gestapo Festung Furulund magasinet Dagbladet no in Norwegian Collection of testimonies concerning Gestapo activity in occupied Poland during WWII in Chronicles of Terror database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gestapo amp oldid 1140070470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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