Kurt Bader

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kurt Bader (born February 26, 1899 in Mannheim ; † June 1, 1959 in Müllheim (Baden) ) was a German lawyer and, at the time of National Socialism, an SS brigade leader and major general of the police.

Life

Bader was the son of an engineer. He took part in the First World War from 1917 , most recently with the rank of lieutenant . Then he took part in March 1920 as a member of a volunteer corps in the Kapp Putsch and in the fighting against the Red Ruhr Army . In April 1920 he joined the Baden Security Police, which he left again in September 1922 with the rank of police lieutenant. He then studied law and political science at the University of Freiburg im Breisgau from 1922 to 1925 and was awarded a doctorate in 1929. jur. PhD . From mid-June 1929 he was a court assessor at the district office in Mannheim. In December 1929 he was appointed a councilor and transferred to the Baden Ministry of the Interior. He joined the NSDAP in May 1932 (membership number 3.079.935), and from April 1933 he was a member of the SS (SS number 103.169).

After the seizure of power by the Nazis, he was assigned in March 1933 with the supervisory commissioner of the police department of the Interior Ministry of Baden and appointed in early May 1933, senior civil and early January 1934 Ministerial. In this function he was involved in the personnel restructuring of the police administration in line with the Nazi regime. From the beginning of June 1934 he worked for two years in the Reich Ministry of the Interior and then in the main office of the Ordnungspolizei . At the end of December 1939, Bader was promoted to ministerial director; the year before, Kurt Daluege, head of the German Order Police , had named him one of his best employees. From December 1940 to June 1943 Bader headed the Office Group VuR II in the main office of the Ordnungspolizei. Bader was appointed SS Brigade Leader in April 1941 and two years later Major General of the Police. From September 1943 until the end of the Second World War he was inspector of the regulatory police in Vienna .

After the war he was interned and denazified . Since Bader could not return to the judicial service, he settled as a lawyer.

See also

Fonts

  • Collection of police regulations from Baden. With e. Foreword by Karl Pflaumer u. with e. Inlet u. Subject reg. ed. v. Kurt Bader; Alfred Schühly [and a.]. Verl. F. Law u. Verwaltungsg Weller, Berlin 1936.
  • Structure and structure of the regulatory police. Verl. F. Law u. Verwaltg Weller, Berlin 1943 (the work was placed on the list of literature to be discarded)

literature

  • Hans-Joachim Neufeldt, Jürgen Huck , Georg Tessin : On the history of the regulatory police 1936–1945. Part I and II. In: Schriften des Bundesarchivs, Edition 3, Koblenz 1957.
  • Michael Ruck: Corps Spirit and State Consciousness: Officials in the German Southwest 1928 to 1972. Oldenbourg, Munich 1996, ISBN 978-3-486-56197-5 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Michael Ruck: Corps spirit and state consciousness. Officials in the German southwest 1928 to 1972. Munich 1996, p. 135 f.
  2. a b c d Hans-Joachim Neufeldt, Jürgen Huck , Georg Tessin : On the history of the Ordnungspolizei 1936–1945. Part I and II. In: Schriften des Bundesarchivs, Edition 3, Koblenz 1957, p. 106
  3. Angela Borgstedt : Denazification in Karlsruhe 1946 to 1951. Political cleansing in the area of ​​tension between occupation policy and a fresh start in local politics (see also: Karlsruhe, Univ., Diss., 2000). UVK-Verlags-Gesellschaft, Konstanz 2001, ISBN 3-89669-985-7 , p. 251
  4. ^ German administration for popular education in the Soviet zone of occupation: List of the literature to be sorted out. Second addendum. Deutscher Zentralverlag, Berlin 1948 ( digitized version )