Ignatz Theodor Griebl

Dr. Ignatz Theodor Griebl (born in 1899) was a prominent German-American physician and a recruiter for the German spy network in New York City.[1]

Early life

Ignatz T. Griebl was born in Bavaria, a southeastern state in Germany in 1899.[2] He served in the German army as a First Lieutenant Artillery Officer during World War I but was injured during a battle at the Italian front. He later went on to study medicine at the University of Munich and immigrated to the United States of America in 1925. He first started a practice in Maine but subsequently moved to Yorkville, New York due to the large community of German-Americans in that region. His medical practice focused on obstetrics.

Espionage

Dr. Ignatz Griebl became head of the German spy network in New York, responsible for the recruitment of German spies into their network.[1] In 1938, about three years after his immigration into the United States, an FBI Special Agent Leon G. Turrou ran an investigation that targeted Nazi German spies actively working within the United States.[3] Part of his method of investigation was the use of polygraph tests on potential German espionage candidates. Dr. Ignatz T. Griebl was one of seven other subjects who were placed for the mandatory polygraph tests. According to notes, he was the most interesting subject of the test. After it was administered (on May 5, 1938), Dr. Griebl "made us relax all vigilance, all watchfulness over him."[3] However, it was noticeable to the FBI agents that Dr. Griebl was worried and must have felt like he had given himself up.

Five days later, it was discovered that Dr. Ignatz T. Griebl had fled to Germany aboard the S.S. Bremen.

Griebl was interviewed by representatives of the New York U.S. Attorney Office at the American Consulate in Berlin, Germany on September 17, 1938. Griebl agreed to the meeting in hopes of obtaining the release of his wife then under bail in New York in connection with the espionage trial. At the time he was reported to be employed as a physician in Vienna.[4]

Griebl survived WWII. On August 19, 1945 he was arrested in Salzburg, Austria, by Allied authorities. He was recognized while applying for a travel permit from the Allied Military Government.[5]

Griebl remained a fugitive until March 14, 1950 when a Nolle Prosequi order (dropping the case against the defendant) was approved on the recommendation of U.S. Attorney Irving H. Saypol. Griebl had been under indictment for espionage since June 20, 1938.[6]

gollark: It still seems to *work*, but the noise is annoying and I figure relying on it continuing to work with a capacitor blown or something is maybe not smart.
gollark: The nearest repair centres are, according to the website, quite far away, too.
gollark: My device is still warrantied but not having a laptop for ages while it gets repaired would be very inconvenient, so does anyone know how long this sort of thing generally takes to get fixed (or if there is a simple repair I can do, but I doubt it)?
gollark: I have begun hearing a periodic buzzing-ish noise when heavy GPU loads occur, since hearing a "pop" noise earlier today. I figure this is a failure of the GPU power supply somehow.
gollark: It seems kind of dubious that someone can remotely do serious physical damage to your wireless hardware.

References

  1. Breuer, William B. (1993). Race to the Moon:America's Duel with the Soviets. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 0-275-94481-6.
  2. https://archive.org/details/gameoffoxesuntol00fararich/page/22
  3. "Chapter 15 - Nazi Spies". Antipolygraph.org. Retrieved 2016-04-17.
  4. New York Times, Sep 18 1938, Hardy Aides Examine Dr. Griebl in Berlin
  5. New York Times, Aug 20 1945, Griebl Arrested in Austria
  6. Court Docket No. C 102-462, United States District Court, Southern District of New York, United States versus Udo von Bonin et al., filed March 20, 1950
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