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Hermann Hackmann
Hermann Hackmann
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Hermann Wilhelm Hackmann (November 11, 1913 – August 20, 1994) was a German war criminal, Nazi SS captain in two extermination camps during World War II. He was a roll call officer at KL Buchenwald, and lead guard in charge of the so-called protective custody at Majdanek concentration camp in German-occupied Poland. Described as a brutal man with a cynical sense of humour, Hackmann was tried three times. The first time, he was prosecuted for murder and embezzlement and sentenced to death by SS Judge Georg Konrad Morgen in connection with the Koch trial. However, Hackmann's sentence was later commuted to a prison term. He spent at least five months as a regular prisoner in Dachau concentration camp before being transferred to a penal battalion.[1][2]

Key Information

Trials

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Hackmann came from Osnabrück. At the age of 24 he first assumed the post of SS officer at Buchenwald. After the war, Hackmann was prosecuted this time by the U.S. government at the Buchenwald Trial of 1947. He was one of twenty-two Nazis sentenced to death for his role in the crimes against humanity committed at Buchenwald, though the sentence was commuted to life imprisonment in 1948. Details of his activities in Buchenwald that surfaced during the trial portray him as a man who was greatly feared by the prisoners and prone to violence and using different ways to torture prisoners. Inmates were frequently beaten, kicked and whipped by Hackmann with sticks and whips. He was also known to make prisoners kneel so he could kick them in the scrotum. There was a rule against spitting on the camp road and when Hackmann saw some spit on the ground he forced the nearest inmate to lick it up. One witness testified that he had two block leaders bend a birch tree where he made a Jewish man hold onto it. When the block leaders released the tree, the man was flung into the air into a stone quarry.[3]

In 1950, Hackmann's sentence was further reduced to 25 years.[4] He was paroled in 1955.[5]

During the Third Majdanek trial between 1975 and 1981, he was sentenced to an additional ten years imprisonment for two counts of serving as joint accessory to murder of at least 141 prisoners at KL Lublin / Majdanek concentration camp.[6]

References

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from Grokipedia
Hermann Wilhelm Hackmann (11 November 1913 – 20 August 1994) was a German SS officer who held the rank of and served in administrative roles at Buchenwald and Majdanek concentration camps during . Born in to a construction foreman, Hackmann joined the SS and was assigned as to Buchenwald Karl Koch from 1939 to 1941, later becoming Schutzhaftlagerführer responsible for prisoner oversight and roll calls, where he gained notoriety as "Jonny" for routinely beating with a stick. In 1941, he transferred to Majdanek as its first Schutzhaftlagerführer, overseeing the camp amid operations that resulted in tens of thousands of deaths. During 1943, SS judge Konrad Morgen's investigation into camp corruption and unauthorized killings led to Hackmann's death sentence by an SS court for murder, which was commuted to service in a penal battalion before his return to duty. Postwar, he faced the U.S. military Buchenwald trial, receiving a death sentence commuted to , and later the 1975–1981 Majdanek trial, where he was convicted of aiding and abetting murder in at least 1,000 cases and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment as the lead defendant.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Hermann Hackmann was born on 11 November 1913 in , in the Prussian within the (present-day , ). Little documented information exists regarding his immediate family or early upbringing, though records indicate he grew up in a modest environment typical of the region's working-class households during the pre-World War I era. Osnabrück, an industrial center known for its and sectors, provided the socioeconomic context for Hackmann's formative years, though specific parental occupations or sibling details remain unverified in primary historical accounts.

Pre-War Occupation

Hermann Hackmann was born on November 11, 1913, in , . At the age of 19, he enlisted in the in 1933, during the early years of the Nazi regime's consolidation of power. Historical records provide no specific details on any civilian occupation or professional training Hackmann pursued prior to this enlistment, with available documentation focusing primarily on his subsequent roles within the and concentration camp administration.

SS Enlistment and Early Assignments

Joining the Nazi Party and SS

Hackmann enlisted in the (SS) on 1 November 1933, receiving membership number 164,705. This occurred shortly after the Nazi consolidation of power following the of March 1933, during a period of rapid SS expansion as an elite paramilitary organization under . At age 20, Hackmann, a former apprentice in his native , sought employment and ideological alignment amid economic pressures and the regime's emphasis on loyalty to the National Socialist cause. Following his SS induction, Hackmann underwent basic training and was assigned as an aide-de-camp at , one of the earliest such facilities established in 1933 for political prisoners, by 1934. His early role involved administrative and guard duties under camp commander SS-Standartenführer Heinrich Liebehenschel, reflecting the 's growing control over the camp system through the Inspectorate of Concentration Camps. This assignment marked Hackmann's entry into the repressive apparatus, where SS personnel enforced discipline via orders targeting perceived enemies of the state. Hackmann joined the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (NSDAP), or , later on 1 May 1937, assigned membership number 5,546,919. Party membership, while not mandatory for SS officers, provided additional privileges and reinforced ideological commitment, particularly as the organization swelled to over five million members by the late . Hackmann's delayed entry—four years after his SS enlistment—may reflect administrative processing or his focus on SS service, as dual affiliation became commonplace for career advancement within the regime's . No primary records indicate specific motivations beyond general drives emphasizing racial purity, , and national revival.

Initial Roles in the Concentration Camp System

Hermann Hackmann entered the Nazi concentration camp system through assignment to Buchenwald, where he served as deputy to commandant Karl Koch and as Schutzhaftlagerführer, responsible for administering the compound and supervising SS non-commissioned officers in prisoner control operations. This position entailed enforcing daily routines, including roll calls and disciplinary measures, which systematically subjected inmates to physical strain and psychological intimidation as part of the framework for detaining and exploiting political prisoners, criminals, and other categories targeted under Nazi policy. Prisoner recollections from the period highlight Hackmann's direct role in these procedures, portraying him as an enforcer whose oversight amplified the camp's punitive environment, though accounts vary in assessing his personal demeanor amid the broader institutional violence. His early tenure at Buchenwald, established in July 1937 near , positioned him within the SS units adapted for camp guardianship, marking his transition from general SS service to specialized camp administration.

Service at Buchenwald

Appointment as Rapportführer

Hermann Hackmann assumed the role of Rapportführer at in 1937, coinciding with the facility's establishment as one of the Nazi regime's early major camps outside Dachau. , located near , began operations on July 15, 1937, initially housing political prisoners under SS oversight, and Hackmann's appointment positioned him within the camp's administrative hierarchy responsible for prisoner accountability and reporting. Prior to this, Hackmann had enlisted in the SS and gained experience in lower-level camp functions, facilitating his selection for the Buchenwald post amid the rapid expansion of the concentration camp network following the regime's consolidation of power. The Rapportführer position entailed direct supervision of daily prisoner roll calls, documentation of infractions, and liaison duties between the guard staff and the camp commandant, , in matters of discipline and custody. Hackmann, holding the rank of SS-Obersturmführer at the time, reported to the Schutzhaftlagerführer and operated within the sector, where enforcement of SS policies on prisoner treatment was paramount. His tenure in this capacity lasted until approximately 1941, when he was reassigned to Majdanek, reflecting the SS's practice of rotating personnel experienced in camp operations to new sites. This appointment underscored Hackmann's alignment with the escalating demands of the for reliable mid-level officers capable of maintaining order through rigorous oversight.

Documented Abuses and Internal Reputation

Hackmann, serving as Rapportführer at Buchenwald from approximately 1941, oversaw daily prisoner roll calls (Appell), where systematic brutality was routine. Trial evidence from the 1947 Buchenwald proceedings documented his direct participation in prisoner beatings and killings during these assemblies, including supervising the use of pickaxe handles to beat inmates to death, often while laughing at their suffering. Such acts contributed to the arbitrary murder of prisoners under his watch, as established through survivor affidavits and witness accounts presented at the U.S. military tribunal. Among prisoners, Hackmann held a reputation as one of the camp's most feared and hated officers, rivaling the notoriety of for personal cruelty and indifference to human life. This perception stemmed from his hands-on enforcement of discipline, which frequently escalated to lethal violence without provocation. Within the administration at Buchenwald, his methods aligned with the camp's operational norms under commandant Karl Koch, earning him promotions despite the evident excess; however, his aggressive style later drew scrutiny in broader Nazi internal probes, though not decisively during his Buchenwald tenure.

Service at Majdanek

Transfer and Role as Schutzhaftlagerführer

Hackmann, previously deputy to at Buchenwald, transferred to the newly established (KL Lublin) in October 1941 alongside Koch, who assumed command there. This move followed the SS's expansion of the concentration camp system into occupied , with Majdanek's initial setup beginning in late September 1941. Appointed as Majdanek's first Schutzhaftlagerführer (protective custody camp leader), Hackmann oversaw the Schutzhaftlager, the core prisoner compound encompassing barracks, labor assignments, and internal security. His duties included coordinating block leaders and Kapos, conducting roll calls, allocating prisoner work details, and implementing disciplinary measures such as beatings and executions for infractions or escapes. As second-in-command after Koch, Hackmann held broad operational authority over the camp's non-administrative SS staff and prisoner management, contributing to the enforcement of harsh policies from the camp's through mid-1942. Prisoner testimonies later described him as directly involved in supervising brutal punishments, though specific attributions varied in post-war proceedings.

Key Events and Operational Involvement

As Schutzhaftlagerführer, Hackmann oversaw the protective custody compound at Majdanek, managing daily prisoner roll calls, work assignments, and disciplinary measures from the camp's establishment in October 1941. In this capacity, he directed the processing of the camp's initial inmates, primarily Soviet prisoners of war captured during , who arrived in late October 1941 and numbered around 2,000 in the first transports. These prisoners faced immediate harsh conditions, including forced labor and summary executions for perceived infractions, under Hackmann's operational authority. A notable early incident under Hackmann's tenure occurred shortly after the Soviet POW arrivals, when approximately 170 prisoners attempted a mass escape by cutting through and fleeing toward nearby woods. The breakout failed due to inadequate preparation and swift SS response, with most escapees recaptured or killed; Hackmann later testified that the attempt "failed entirely," reflecting the camp's tightened security protocols he enforced thereafter. This event underscored his role in maintaining order through punitive reprisals, including collective punishments on remaining Soviet inmates, whom he reportedly degraded through public humiliations such as forced gestures of submission. Hackmann's operational involvement extended to prisoner selections for labor, staffing, and executions, where he participated in beatings and shootings of non-compliant . He oversaw the assignment of prisoner-physicians to the camp infirmary, drawing from the inmate population to handle sick detainees under directives, often amid reports of inadequate care leading to high mortality. Additionally, in coordination with camp commandant , Hackmann delegated oversight to subsidiary labor sites, such as the Jewish work camp at 7 Lipowa Street in , where he and -Hauptsturmführer Hermann Stroink supervised guard detachments and prisoner exploitation for industrial production. Survivor accounts described him as a figure prone to arbitrary violence, striking s during inspections and enforcing a regime of terror that contributed to the camp's estimated 78,000 deaths by 1944.

Internal Nazi Investigations

Corruption Probes Under Konrad Morgen

Konrad Morgen, an SS judge appointed in 1943 to a special commission investigating corruption and abuses in concentration camps, extended his inquiries to Majdanek (also known as ) amid reports of systemic of Jewish prisoner property and other illicit gains by camp staff. Hermann Hackmann, serving as Schutzhaftlagerführer responsible for operations, was implicated in these practices, including the diversion of valuables and resources intended for official SS channels. The probes uncovered evidence of Hackmann's role in exploiting camp assets, aligning with broader patterns of enrichment that led to the removal of Majdanek commandant in November 1943. Morgen's investigation escalated beyond financial irregularities to include unauthorized executions of prisoners by Hackmann, which violated SS protocols requiring official approval for killings and constituted under internal disciplinary standards. Hackmann was arrested and prosecuted in an SS court for both and these extrajudicial murders, resulting in a death sentence. The verdict reflected Morgen's authority to enforce ideological and operational purity within the SS, though higher echelons intervened to commute the penalty, reassigning Hackmann to a penal unit rather than execution. This outcome spared him immediate death but marked a formal rebuke amid the regime's internal efforts to curb perceived excesses that undermined efficiency. The Majdanek probes under highlighted tensions between camp autonomy and central oversight, with Hackmann's case exemplifying how local officers profited from the camp's operations—estimated to involve thousands of victims' possessions—while evading full accountability through commutation. No precise quantification of Hackmann's gains was publicly documented in surviving records, but the investigation contributed to a temporary of implicated personnel, including transfers and executions like Florstedt's in 1945. Hackmann's survival and later evasion of Allied capture underscored the limits of Morgen's reformist zeal within the collapsing Nazi hierarchy.

Connection to the Karl Koch Affair

In the course of SS judge Konrad Morgen's 1943–1944 investigations into corruption, embezzlement, and unauthorized murders within the concentration camp system, Hermann Hackmann emerged as a figure linked to the broader enveloping Karl Koch, the former commandant of Buchenwald (1937–1941) and Majdanek (October 1941–August 1942). Koch, who had been Hackmann's superior at Buchenwald where Hackmann served in administrative and guard roles, faced charges including the illicit sale of camp valuables, falsification of records, and ordering killings without authorization, such as the execution of prisoners for personal gain. Hackmann's transfer to Majdanek in late 1941 placed him directly under Koch's command as Schutzhaftlagerführer, responsible for operations, prisoner selections, and internal security, during a period of documented graft and . Morgen's probes, initiated under orders from to root out inefficiencies undermining the war effort, explicitly listed both Koch and Hackmann among high-priority targets for scrutiny across Buchenwald and Majdanek. While Koch's trial in in July 1944 culminated in his conviction for corruption and the murder of at least six prisoners—leading to his execution by the SS on April 5, 1945, just days before the camp's evacuation—Hackmann faced parallel accusations of selective killings, including the shooting of 12 Jewish inmates without formal orders. An SS court under Morgen sentenced Hackmann to death for these murders in 1944, reflecting the regime's intolerance for deviations that risked operational discipline, though Himmler intervened to commute the penalty to frontline service in a Strafkompanie (penal unit) on the Eastern Front. This intersection highlighted systemic issues in camp administration under Koch's influence, where subordinates like Hackmann allegedly participated in or overlooked practices blending personal profiteering with extrajudicial violence, such as unauthorized executions to conceal thefts of belongings. Morgen's testimony in proceedings emphasized that such cases, while framed as measures, often prioritized preserving the camps' facade of order over addressing core atrocities, with Hackmann's lighter outcome attributed to his lower rank and utility as a combat replacement amid wartime shortages. The affair underscored internal Nazi efforts to police their own ranks, yet spared broader accountability, as Hackmann survived the war and evaded immediate Allied capture.

Post-War Evasion and Capture

Immediate Aftermath of the War

Following Germany's unconditional surrender on May 8, 1945, Hermann Hackmann, who had been demoted to a penal battalion during internal SS corruption probes but survived the war's final months, was captured by U.S. forces amid the internment of suspected Nazi personnel. He was held for interrogation as part of early Allied investigations into concentration camp atrocities, particularly those at Buchenwald where he had served as Rapportführer from 1938 to 1941. Unlike many SS officers who fled eastward or went into hiding under false identities to avoid Soviet retribution, Hackmann's apprehension by Western Allies positioned him for prompt scrutiny under U.S. military jurisdiction. Hackmann's custody facilitated his inclusion among 30 defendants in the United States v. Josias Prince of Waldeck et al. case, the primary Buchenwald trial convened at Dachau from April 11 to December 1947. There, evidence of his direct involvement in prisoner abuses, including beatings and selections for execution, led to a death sentence on December 24, 1947, later commuted to on January 16, 1948, reflecting initial U.S. policy toward high-ranking camp functionaries. This outcome contrasted with executions for other Buchenwald staff, underscoring variances in sentencing based on prosecutorial evidence and individual culpability assessments.

Life in West Germany Prior to Prosecution

After his release on parole from Landsberg Prison in spring 1955, following a sentence reduction from the 1947 Buchenwald trial, Hermann Hackmann settled in Uslar, a town in Lower Saxony, West Germany. In Uslar, Hackmann worked as a merchant and procurist, a role involving authorized representation for a business. He lived unobtrusively for over two decades, with no recorded involvement in public or political activities, until his rearrest on November 5, 1976, by West German police in connection with investigations into Majdanek concentration camp atrocities.

Trials and Conviction

The Düsseldorf Majdanek Trials

The Düsseldorf Majdanek Trials, conducted by the Landgericht Düsseldorf under case number 8 Ks 1/75, prosecuted 16 former SS personnel for war crimes and committed at between 1941 and 1944. The proceedings, which spanned from November 26, 1975, to June 30, 1981, marked West Germany's longest postwar Nazi trial, focusing on individual acts of murder rather than under the camp's extermination operations. Evidence comprised survivor testimonies, perpetrator interrogations, and surviving SS documents, though challenges arose from the passage of time, witness reliability, and the destruction of records by fleeing Nazis in 1944. Hermann Hackmann, SS-Hauptsturmführer and former Schutzhaftlagerführer (protective custody camp leader) at Majdanek from October 1942 to June 1943, served as the lead defendant. Prosecutors charged him with the murder of over 400 prisoners through direct participation in selections for , summary executions, brutal interrogations, and encouragement of guard violence, including documented instances of personally shooting inmates during escapes or punishments. Key evidence included affidavits from former prisoners detailing Hackmann's role in suppressing a November 3, 1943, mass execution of Jewish prisoners and his oversight of daily camp terror, though broader complicity in killings required individualized proof of intent under West German law. In his defense, Hackmann portrayed himself as a non-ideological functionary who joined the SS for career advancement rather than antisemitic conviction, claiming obedience to orders mitigated personal culpability and denying systematic hatred toward Jews. He contested survivor accounts as exaggerated, arguing that camp violence stemmed from wartime necessities like maintaining order amid escapes and uprisings, such as the partial success of a 1943 mass breakout where guards under his command killed only two escapees. The court weighed this against forensic and testimonial corroboration of his hands-on brutality, rejecting full exoneration but limiting convictions to verifiable cases. On June 30, 1981, Hackmann was convicted on multiple counts of , receiving a 10-year sentence for his role in the deaths of at least 300 prisoners via targeted violence and orders. This outcome, alongside acquittals for five defendants and lighter terms for others (e.g., life for guard Hermine Braunsteiner-Ryan, 12 years for ), highlighted evidentiary hurdles in proving specific for each victim in systemic atrocities, contributing to perceptions of judicial restraint in 1970s . Appeals partially succeeded for some, but Hackmann's sentence stood, reflecting the trial's emphasis on documented individual excesses over overarching command liability.

Verdict, Sentence, and Appeals

On 30 June 1981, following a that began on 26 November 1975, the District Court convicted Hermann Hackmann, as the former Schutzhaftlagerführer at , of murder in two specific instances: participation in the camp's "typhus action" (Fleckfieberaktion), which involved the selection and killing of prisoners infected with , and the execution of 18 prisoners who had escaped from the Eldorado factory work detail. He was sentenced to a total of ten years' imprisonment, reflecting the court's determination of his joint complicity in these acts but not extending to broader charges of due to evidentiary limitations in proving individual intent amid collective Nazi operations. The prosecution had sought harsher penalties based on survivor testimonies and documents linking Hackmann to selections and shootings, but the judges emphasized the need for direct proof of personal murderous actions beyond his supervisory role. No records indicate that Hackmann or the prosecution successfully appealed the verdict, which entered into force as delivered, allowing for his release after serving the term accounting for time in . The relatively modest sentence drew criticism from remembrance groups for underrepresenting Hackmann's documented oversight of prisoner abuses and executions during his tenure from September 1942 to , though German postwar prioritized individualized over in such cases.

Death and Assessment

Final Years and Death

Hackmann was convicted on 30 June 1981 by the Düsseldorf state court and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment for his direct involvement in the murder of at least 2,246 prisoners at Majdanek, including through selections for gas chambers and shootings. The sentence reflected his role as deputy commandant and leader, where he oversaw brutal camp operations from to 1943. He served the term in a West German prison, consistent with post-war prosecutions of lower-level personnel that often resulted in time-limited penalties rather than . Released after completing his sentence, Hackmann lived out his remaining years in obscurity, having previously operated as a furniture dealer in prior to the trial. He died on 20 August 1994 at the age of 80. No public records detail the cause of death, which appears to have been from natural causes given his age.

Historical Evaluation of His Role

Hermann Hackmann served as the first Schutzhaftlagerführer (protective custody camp leader) at Majdanek concentration and from its establishment in October 1941 until mid-1942, functioning as second-in-command under commandant and overseeing the internal prisoner compounds, daily roll calls, punishments, and labor assignments. In this capacity, he enforced the camp's regime of terror, including the supervision of Soviet prisoners of war who suffered extreme mortality rates due to , exposure, and forced labor under his watch, with many dying in makeshift burrows during the harsh winter of 1941-1942. His responsibilities extended to transitioning labor forces from dying Soviet POWs to Jewish inmates from the region, aligning with the camp's shift toward systematic extermination. Survivor accounts portray Hackmann as a meticulous and elegant figure in his late 20s or early 30s, often appearing in white gloves during roll calls where he demonstrated dominance through symbolic acts of , such as flicking the caps of Soviet POWs with a to signify their subhuman status in Nazi . Polish prisoner Jan Nowak described him as a "miserable figure" whose refined demeanor contrasted sharply with the ragged prisoners, amplifying the psychological devastation of his without always resorting to overt physical brutality. These practices reflected Hackmann's of power within the SS hierarchy, using selective violence to assert superiority over both inmates and subordinates, rather than indiscriminate beatings common among other guards. Historians assess Hackmann's role as emblematic of mid-level SS perpetrators who operationalized the Holocaust's machinery through bureaucratic diligence and ideological commitment, contributing directly to the deaths of thousands at Majdanek—estimated at around 78,000 victims overall—via oversight of selections, executions, and lethal conditions, though he avoided the higher visibility of commandants like Koch. His 1981 conviction in the Düsseldorf Majdanek trials for aiding and abetting murder, resulting in a 10-year sentence, highlighted individual agency amid systemic crimes but also postwar judicial challenges in attributing precise intent, as defenses emphasized obedience to orders over personal initiative. This evaluation underscores that, while embedded in Nazi structures, Hackmann's actions demonstrated willing participation in dehumanization and genocide, informed by prior experience at Buchenwald and a worldview viewing certain groups as racial inferiors.

References

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