Ludwig Stenglein

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Georg Ludwig Richard Stenglein (born December 27, 1869 in Regensburg , † November 12, 1936 in Cologne-Lindenthal ) was a German lawyer.

Life

Stenglein was the son of the accounting commissioner Johann Georg Stenglein and his wife Luise, nee Stiegler. In 1898 he was appointed third public prosecutor in Landshut and in 1901 second public prosecutor in Passau . From 1905 he was a district judge in Ansbach and in 1913 he was appointed chief magistrate in Nuremberg , where he was appointed district judge in 1919 . In 1923 he became the first public prosecutor in charge of the supervision in Munich and in 1926 he moved to Bamberg as president of the regional court . In 1928 he was President of the Regional Court in Munich until he was appointed Senate President at the Bavarian Supreme Court in Munich in 1933. Stenglein was advised to retire on January 1, 1934 because he intervened against the politically motivated forced retirement of the second public prosecutor, Martin Dresse , in the Ministry of Justice on January 1, 1934 and took responsibility for his conduct in the process, whereupon he was notified if he agreed with it Dresse wanted to declare solidarity, then he too could go; it is left to him to submit a pension application. After his retirement he and his wife moved to Bad Godesberg - Mehlem (now Bonn ) in mid-1935 . After his death on November 14, 1936, he was buried in the Melatenfriedhof in Cologne and his body was transferred to the North Cemetery in Munich on March 30, 1954 .

Stenglein was a member of the NSDAP from May 1, 1933 to August 1936 . His membership ended because he was removed from membership due to unpaid dues.

Hitler trial

As the first public prosecutor in Munich, he was a prosecutor in the Hitler trial in 1924 . His employees were the second public prosecutor Hans Ehard and the second public prosecutor Martin Dresse . Despite his criminal application, Adolf Hitler because of high treason to eight years imprisonment to condemn, was that on April 1, 1924 by the People's Court under Chairman Georg Neithardt sentenced only to the minimum sentence of five years. Although Stenglein had requested “to refuse the granting of a probation period, since there can be no question of a renunciation of intentions dangerous to the state of the convicted… and the convicted did not behave during the execution of the sentence in such a way that the expectation that they would be justified would be justified behave well in the future even without the entire execution ”, Hitler was released on parole on December 20, 1924 from the Landsberg Fortress .

Individual evidence

  1. Schweitzer's appointment calendar for the Bavarian lawyers for 1929.
  2. BHStA, Reichsstatthalter 220: Bay. Ministry of Justice to Reich Governor Epp .
  3. Federal Archives Berlin
  4. Wilhelm Hoegner - The difficult outsider.
  5. ^ The Hitler Trial 1924 Ludwig Stenglein, Prosecutor in the Hitler Trial 1924 ... on the homepage of Andreas Stenglein .