Aloys Becker

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Aloys Becker (* July 21, 1898 in Contwig / Pfalz ; † March 21, 1982 in Frankfurt / Main ) was a judge at the Federal Disciplinary Court and head of the Gelsenkirchen Police Office.

Life

Aloys Becker graduated from high school in 1916 and did military service as a flagjunker in the 7th Rhenish Infantry Regiment No. 69 and was deployed in Flanders . After the war he studied law in Göttingen , Freiburg , Würzburg and Munich . After the two state examinations, he joined the Reich Finance Service on September 1, 1925. On February 1, 1929, he was appointed government councilor in the Prussian financial service in Altona. A year later he was seconded to the Altona police headquarters. In 1930 Becker moved to the Arnsberg district government . Before he was appointed deputy head of the Gelsenkirchen police station on September 1, 1933, he worked as a consultant at the Berlin police headquarters and at the Wilmersdorf police station. At the beginning of 1934 he was definitely head of the Gelsenkirchen police department. After a short time, he was transferred to the Stade district government and later to the Koblenz Higher Presidium . After the war, Becker came to the North Rhine Province in Bonn and later to Düsseldorf, where he was a speaker and designated representative of the Upper President. In autumn 1946 he held the post of university clerk in the Ministry of Culture of North Rhine-Westphalia and in July 1949 was entrusted with the management of the procurement department. From May 1954 on, Becker was a judge at the Federal Disciplinary Court in Berlin. He remained in this office until his retirement on July 31, 1963.

Becker was a member of the center and actively involved in the Catholic resistance movement in the Rhineland.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla : Senior administrative officials and functionaries in Westphalia and Lippe (1918-1945 / 46). Biographisches Handbuch, Münster, Aschendorff Verlag, 2004, p. 115, ISBN 978-3-402-06799-4 .

Web links

  • Aloys Becker Short biography on the Internet portal "Westphalian History"