Georg Heymann

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Georg Jakob Heymann (born April 10, 1885 in Sonsbeck , † May 19, 1964 in Frankfurt am Main ) was a German lawyer.

Career

Heymann was sworn in as a trainee lawyer in January 1909. He reached the assessor service age on May 8, 1915. From April 1921 he was a permanent unskilled worker. In November 1921 he was appointed to the Public Prosecutor's Office in Düsseldorf. In October 1926 he came to Frankfurt am Main as a district judge and at the same time district judge .

In April 1933 he was given a forced leave of absence due to his Jewish roots, and in July 1933 he was banned from working in accordance with Section 3 of the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service (BBG) from November 1933.

After the collapse of the Third Reich, he was rehabilitated and was attorney general in Frankfurt.

Honors

literature

  • Hans Bergemann, Simone Ladwig-Winters: Judges and public prosecutors of Jewish origin in Prussia under National Socialism: a legal factual investigation: a documentation. - Bundesanzeiger-Verlag, 2004, p. 202f.

Individual evidence

  1. BANKING SCANDAL. You say to each other. In: DER SPIEGEL 35/1951. Retrieved April 1, 2016 .