Ludwig Neubourg

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Ludwig Friedrich Neubourg (born June 29, 1903 in Potsdam , † March 25, 1964 in Bremen ) was a German police officer and intelligence officer . It was during the Nazi regime in the Secret State Police Office and the Reich Security Main Office and in the 1950s and 1960s in the Federal Intelligence Service operates (BND).

Live and act

After attending school, Neubourg studied law . In 1926 he was at the University of Leipzig with a thesis on sub-tariff remuneration doctorate . In 1931 he joined the NSDAP ( membership number 601.397) and the Schutzstaffel (SS) (SS number 13.837). At that time he was living at Rheingaustraße 15 in Berlin.

In 1933 Neubourg was taken as a probationary detective assistant in the service of the newly established Secret State Police Office, in which the processing of Commissariat 5, which was responsible for "Soviet espionage" and "peripheral states". From 1935 to 1939 he worked in Department IV of the Gestapo Office / Reich Security Main Office in Berlin.

From 1939 to 1942 Neubourg was in the GFP deployment at AOK I. From 1943 to 1945 he was employed in Office VI of the Reich Security Main Office, most recently with the rank of criminal councilor. On May 18, 1945, he was captured by the Americans in Trins am Brenner and was then repeatedly interrogated, particularly with regard to his knowledge of the political situation in Spain.

In 1957 Neubourg was taken into the service of the Federal Intelligence Service, operating under the code names Brehmer , Bremer and Zoeller . At the BND, Neubourg was a full-time employee with flat-rate remuneration and initiator. The organizational unit 85 finally came to the judgment that there was, and because of false statements and because of the behavior of Neubourg no longer trust to work with him, therefore, recommended its termination. However, he died before the trial was over.

Fonts

  • Pay below the tariff , Leipzig 1926. (Dissertation)

literature

  • Sabrina Nowack: Security risk Nazi exposure. Personnel reviews in the Federal Intelligence Service in the 1960s , Chr. Links Verlag, Berlin 2016, ISBN 978-3-86153-923-0 , p. 468.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. [1]
  2. ^ Berlin address book for 1932 .
  3. Christoph Graf: Political Police Between Democracy And Dictatorship: The Development Of The Prussian Political Police From The State Protection Organ Of The Weimar Republic To The Secret State Police Of The Third Reich , 1983, p. 423.