97-year-old ex-Nazi camp secretary given two-year suspended prison sentence

A 97-year-old former concentration camp secretary was given a two-year suspended prison sentence on Tuesday in one of Germany’s last Nazi-era trials.

• Read also: Germany: ex-secretary accomplice in 11,000 murders in Nazi camp expresses regret

Irmgard Furchner, accused of complicity in murders in more than 10,000 cases at the Stutthof concentration camp, in present-day Poland, had been on trial since September 2021 before the Court of Itzehoe, in northern Germany.

This condemnation is in accordance with the requisitions of the prosecution which had underlined the “exceptional historical significance” of this trial, with a judgment of a character above all “symbolic”.


97-year-old ex-Nazi camp secretary given two-year suspended prison sentence

The nonagenarian, wearing a white cap, was present at the verdict, which she listened to sitting in her wheelchair.

She had not spoken before the Court, except during one of the very last hearings, in December, where she had expressed regrets.

“I’m sorry for everything that happened. I regret having been in Stutthof at that time,” she said.

Irmgard Furchner is the first woman to be tried in Germany in decades for crimes committed under the Nazis.

She had tried to escape her trial by fleeing on the day of the opening of the hearings. She had left her accommodation in a home for the elderly in a taxi, but had not appeared in court. She was found a few hours later.

Aged 18 to 19 at the time, Ms Furchner, who worked as a typist and secretary to the camp commander, Paul Werner Hoppe, had a position of “essential significance” in the camp’s inhumane system, the prosecutor said. Maxi Wantzen in his requisitions.

Her lawyers had demanded her acquittal, considering that it had not been proven that she had knowledge of the murders carried out systematically in Stutthof.

Due to her age at the time of the events, Irmgard Furchner was tried before a special court for young people.


97-year-old ex-Nazi camp secretary given two-year suspended prison sentence

In Stutthof, a camp near Gdansk (Dantzig at the time) where around 65,000 people perished, “Jewish prisoners, Polish partisans and Soviet prisoners of war” were systematically murdered.

Throughout the trial, several survivors testified, believing, according to the prosecutor, that “it was their duty to speak, even if they had to overcome their pain to do so”.

They lived in disastrous conditions designed to kill them slowly. Most of the inmates died of hunger, thirst, disease, such as typhus, and exhaustion from forced labor.


97-year-old ex-Nazi camp secretary given two-year suspended prison sentence

To execute the weakest, the camp had gas chambers and another place typical of Nazi Germany, where the victim was shot in the neck on the pretext of a medical examination.

According to the prosecutor, the crimes committed would not have been possible without the office system of which Ms. Furchner was one of the cogs. She enjoyed the commander’s confidence and had access to all documents deemed confidential.

Seventy-seven years after the end of World War II, Germany continues to search for ex-Nazi criminals still alive, illustrating the increased, albeit belated, severity of its justice.


97-year-old ex-Nazi camp secretary given two-year suspended prison sentence

Very few women implicated in Nazi crimes were prosecuted. Adolf Hitler’s private secretary, Traudl Junge, was never bothered until her death in 2002.

The case law of the conviction in 2011 of John Demjanjuk, a guard of the Sobibor camp in 1943, to five years in prison, now makes it possible to prosecute for complicity in tens of thousands of assassinations any auxiliary of a camp of concentration, from guard to accountant.

In June, a 101-year-old former guard at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp (north of Berlin) was sentenced to five years in prison.


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