Friedrich Schlanbusch

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Friedrich Schlanbusch as a student in Göttingen in 1907

Friedrich Schlanbusch (born June 8, 1884 in Hamburg ; † November 15, 1964 there ) was a German lawyer and bank director.

Live and act

Friedrich Schlanbusch studied law at the Georg-August University in Göttingen . In 1905 he became a member of the Holzminda fraternity . After passing his exam in 1908, he first became a public prosecutor , then a judge at the Hamburg Regional Court . From April 18, 1922 he was head of the Hamburg criminal police for eleven years . As an expert he took part in meetings of the Senate Commission established in 1925 to examine the question of the new regulation of the prostitution system in Hamburg .

He later moved to the tax authorities, where he worked from 1933 to 1938. On June 23, 1938, Schlanbusch was dismissed as a Senate Syndicate at his own request and was director of the Hamburgische Landesbank until his retirement in 1952 .

Until 1938 he was also a member of the examination boards for the two legal exams in Hamburg, and from November 1953 until his death he was a constitutional judge at the Hamburg constitutional court .

Friedrich Schlanbusch is used by Robert Brack as a character in his crime novel Und das Meer gave his dead again , published in 2008 .

Publications

  • Section 133 of the Criminal Code and its relationship to other criminal offenses. Leipzig, 1918, dissertation Rostock.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Elsheimer (ed.): Directory of the old fraternity members according to the status of the winter semester 1927/28. Frankfurt am Main 1928, p. 450.
  2. ^ Helmut Ebeling: Black Chronicle of a World City. Hamburg criminal history 1919 to 1945. Hamburg 1980, p. 470.
  3. Michaela Freund-Aries: Women under control. Prostitution and its state control in Hamburg from the end of the German Empire to the beginning of the Federal Republic. Dissertation Hamburg 2000. Münster 2003, p. 60.
  4. ^ Peter Gabrielsson: Between surrender and formation of a new Senate. The Hamburg administration in the first days after the war in 1945. In: Journal of the Association for Hamburg History Volume 71, Hamburg 1985, p. 187.
  5. http://www.gangsterbuero.de/bromane/frame13a.html
  6. http://www.abendblatt.de/kultur-live/article546413/Wie-kamen-die-beiden-Kripo-Beamtinnen-1931-ums-Leben.html