Josef Oberhauser
Josef Oberhauser | |
---|---|
Accessory to murder (450,000 counts) East Germany Crimes against humanity Accessory to crimes against humanity | |
Criminal penalty | West Germany 4.5 years imprisonment with hard labor East Germany 15 years imprisonment |
Josef Kaspar Oberhauser (20 September 1915 – 22 November 1979) was a low-ranking German
SS career
Oberhauser was born in
Action T4
In 1939, Oberhauser was assigned to Reichsarbeitsgemeinschaft für Heil- und Pflegeanstalten, part of the office for
Operation Reinhard
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/e/e5/Josef_Oberhauser_and_Kurt_Franz.jpg/170px-Josef_Oberhauser_and_Kurt_Franz.jpg)
After finishing Action T4 in August 1941, in November Oberhauser was transferred to the staff of the
For his work in the implementation of Operation Reinhard, Oberhauser was promoted from SS-
The defendant, Oberhauser, – then an SS-Oberscharführer – was on the staff of the senior
Belzec (Christian Wirth), which saw him appointed as liaison officer to the staff of the senior SS and Police Leader and moreover, unlike other non-commissioned officers, given no fixed area of responsibility within the camp; on the contrary, he was free to do as he personally saw fit. Consequently Oberhauser was often seen in Wirth's company within the camp, but no recognizable activity would have resulted nor would any independent authority have been exercised.Only occasionally was Oberhauser given a role at the implementation of mass killings, the illegality of which he had fully recognized. For example, on the orders of the camp commandant, Wirth, he met trainloads arriving at Belzec, each comprising at least 150 people, at the camp gates on at least five occasions in the period from mid-March to 1st August 1942. He led the supervision of the unloading of the trains and made sure that the train crew did not enter the camp area but were held outside the camp in readiness, to be able to reinforce the outer cordon in case there was an uprising or desperate breakout attempt by the doomed people. All the Jews who arrived on these trains were killed in the manner already described.
When, in spring 1942, a major expansion of Belzec Camp was carried out to increase its capacity for extermination, it was the task of the defendant, to procure the necessary building materials, in particular, for the construction of the larger gas chamber facility. He was allocated vehicles and the people necessary for the fulfillment of this task. In exercising his duties, he was aware of the fact that the work carried out with his assistance, was intended to create the conditions for a significant increase in the numbers of those exterminated. On 1 August 1942, as inspector of the three extermination camps of Belzec,
Belzec Trial - Sentence: LG Munich I dated 21 January 1965, 110 Ks 3/64. IV. The duties of the defendant in Belzec and Lublin.[4]
Transfer to Italy
After the completion of Operation Reinhard, Oberhauser, along with many of his colleagues, was sent to northern Italy in the group Sonderabteilung Einsatz R to participate in anti-partisan warfare and the deportation and killing of Jews there. He was promoted to the rank of SS-Obersturmführer on 30 January 1945. Purportedly, Oberhauser was commandant of Risiera di San Sabba until its closure in late April 1945 (3,000 to 5,000 people died there). He then went to Austria with his unit, and was arrested by the British authorities in May 1945 in Bad Gastein.
Arrest and trial
After his release, Oberhauser was employed as a
In 1963 the
- Accessory to 300,000 cases (charged with 450,000) of collective murder;
- Five other crimes of aiding and abetting collective murder in each of 150 cases.
Oberhauser was sentenced to 4.5 years in prison with hard labor.[5] He was released after serving half of his sentence. Oberhauser was sentenced to life imprisonment in absentia for his crimes committed in Italy, but the Italian extradition request failed. Oberhauser died on 22 November 1979 in Munich.
Oberhauser was unwillingly filmed for Claude Lanzmann's documentary Shoah, released in 1985.
Notes and references
- ^ Sentence by the First Munich District Court (Belzec-Prozess - Urteil, LG München I) (in German)
- ^ Ernst Klee, Willi Dressen, Volker Riess, "The Good Old Days": The Holocaust as Seen by its Perpetrators and Bystanders, Free Press, 1991, p. 228
- OCLC 52838928
- ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum".
- ^ "German Sentenced in Munich for Aiding in Murder of 360,000 Jews". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved 2022-09-23.
Bibliography
- ISBN 978-3-596-16048-8. (updated 2nd edition)
- Ernst Klee : Was sie taten – Was sie wurden. Fischer Taschenbuch, Frankfurt, 1986, ISBN 3-596-24364-5
- Ernst Klee, Willi Dreßen, Volker Rieß: "Schöne Zeiten." ISBN 3-10-039304-X
- Claude Lanzmann: Shoah