Herbert Hagen

Herbert Martin Hagen (20 September 1913 – August 1999) was an SS-Sturmbannführer of Nazi Germany.[1][2][3][4][5]

Herbert Hagen, on 1 May 1943 in Paris.

Hagen served as a personal assistant to the SS police chief in France. In 1980, he was sentenced in Cologne, West Germany, to twelve years imprisonment, for his complicity in the murder of thousands of Jews and others deported from France during World War II; two other former Paris Gestapo men are tried and sentenced at the same time: Kurt Lischka, Gestapo chief in Paris, who was sentenced to 10 years, and Ernst Heinrichsohn, who worked in the Gestapo's "Jewish affairs" department in Paris, sentenced to six years. [6]

Herbert Hagen (In the middle, standing) in Vienna, with Adolf Eichmann on the right and Josef Löwenherz on the left, March 1938

References

  1. Wolfgang Seibel (2010). Macht und Moral: die "Endlösung der Judenfrage" in Frankreich, 1940-1944 (in German). Konstanz University Press. pp. 379–. ISBN 978-3-86253-003-8. Hagen, Herbert Martin (1913-1999) Von 1940 bis 1942 Leiter der Sipo/SD-Stelle Bordeaux ...
  2. Irene Eber (2 April 2012). Wartime Shanghai and the Jewish Refugees from Central Europe: Survival, Co-Existence, and Identity in a Multi-Ethnic City. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 54–. ISBN 978-3-11-026818-8.
  3. Robert S. Wistrich (4 July 2013). Who's Who in Nazi Germany. Routledge. pp. 158–. ISBN 978-1-136-41388-9. He was accused of war crimes together with his former adjunct in Paris, Ernest Heinrichsohn (Mayor of Burgstadt, Bavaria), and Herbert-Martin Hagen, a top SD official in occupied France who had also been sentenced to life imprisonment in ...
  4. Eric Stover; Victor Peskin; Alexa Koenig (12 April 2016). Hiding in Plain Sight: The Pursuit of War Criminals from Nuremberg to the War on Terror. University of California Press. pp. 108–. ISBN 978-0-520-96276-7. Five years later a German court convicted Kurt Lischka and two fellow SS intelligence officers— Herbert-Martin Hagen and Ernst Heinrichson—of mass murder. Hagen received 12 years, Lischka 10 years, and Heinrichson 6 years. At trial ...
  5. Michael Robert Marrus; Robert O. Paxton (1995). Vichy France and the Jews. Stanford University Press. pp. 79–. ISBN 978-0-8047-2499-9. Knochen's apparatus included the twenty-six-year-old SS-Stiirmbahnfuhrer Herbert Martin Hagen, a specialist in Jewish affairs and a former colleague of Eich- mann's in the RSHA head office in Berlin. Early in August 1940, Hagen established ...
  6. "West German Court Sentences 3 Who Sent Jews to Death Camps". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 12 February 1980.


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