Wilhelm Kiesow

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Wilhelm Kiesow (born November 9, 1881 in Oranienburg ; † January 15, 1938 ) was a German judge .

Life

He was the son of a merchant. In 1904 he passed the first state examination (“excellent”), the second in 1909 (“good”). He became an assessor in the same year. When the war broke out in 1914, he was employed by the Berlin-Schöneberg District Court. During the war he was a district judge at the Commander- in -Chief East in Stage Inspection 9 in Białystok . In 1919 he became an unskilled worker in the Reich Ministry of Justice . In 1920 he became a secret government councilor and lecturer council and then in the same year Ministerialrat. As a ministerial advisor, he worked in the Department of Criminal Procedure Law and then in Department I (Civil Law). He was in charge of drafting the Emminger amendments to reform the criminal process. On February 1, 1933, he was appointed Senate President at the Reich Court. He died in 1938.

source

  • Friedrich Karl Kaul , History of the Reichsgericht, Volume IV (1933–1945), East Berlin 1971.

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