Fritz Liphardt

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Fritz Wilhelm Robert Karl August Liphardt (born May 3, 1905 in Stettin ; † May 18, 1947 ibid) was a German lawyer with the rank of senior government councilor , Gestapo officer , SS leader and head of Einsatzkommando 2 of Einsatzgruppe III in Poland .

Life

Liphardt, son of lawyer Robert Liphardt, studied after the school attendance law and graduated with doctorate to Dr. jur from.

During his traineeship in 1933, he joined the NSDAP ( membership number 2,653,601) and the SA . In 1936 he moved from the SA to the SS (SS no. 280.121). In the SS, Liphardt was promoted to SS-Obersturmbannführer in November 1942 .

Liphardt joined the Stettin State Police Headquarters in August 1935 and became deputy head there in 1936. From February 1938 to June 1938 he was deputy head of the Gestapo in Aachen and from there moved to Frankfurt an der Oder , where he headed the Gestapo office there.

During the Second World War , Liphardt was the leader of Einsatzkommando 2 of Einsatzgruppe III, which murdered Polish intellectuals and Jews.

From November 1939 to October 1943, Liphardt was the commander of the Security Police and the SD (KdS) in the Radom district of the Generalgouvernement . From November 1943 to spring 1945, Liphardt headed the Gestapo in Stettin.

After the end of the war, Liphardt was in Allied custody. Liphardt committed in 1947 in custody in Szczecin on 18 May suicide .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b Klaus-Michael Mallmann, Jochen Böhler and Jürgen Matthäus: Einsatzgruppen in Poland: Presentation and documentation . Scientific Book Society, Stuttgart 2008, p. 30
  2. ^ Israel Gutman (Ed.): Encyclopedia of the Holocaust - The persecution and murder of European Jews , Piper Verlag, Munich / Zurich 1998, 3 volumes, ISBN 3-492-22700-7 , Vol. 1, p. 395; Vol. 2, p. 393
  3. ^ Robert Seidel: German occupation policy in Poland. The Radom District 1939–1945 . Schöningh, Paderborn et al. 2006, ISBN 3-506-75628-1 , ( Schöningh collection on past and present ), (At the same time: Münster (Westphalia), Univ., Diss., 2004), p. 67
  4. ^ Adalbert Rückerl (Ed.): National Socialist Extermination Camps in the Mirror of German Criminal Trials. Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka, Chelmno . dtv 2904, Munich 1977, ISBN 3-423-02904-8 , p. 49