, April 11, 1945 Of the more than 60,000 prisoners who passed through the
Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp complex, with its catastrophic working and living conditions, at least 20,000 died of hunger, exposure, disease and abuse. When American troops reached Mittelbau on 11 April 1945, they found nearly 2,000 dead bodies. Only several hundred prisoners were found alive, mostly sick or dying, as the Mittelbau and its sub-camps had already been forcibly evacuated by the
SS-Totenkopfverbände on April 6, 1945. During the "evacuation", approximately 36,500 prisoners were sent on
death marches and over 8,000 died from starvation, exposure and
summary executions. In one infamous example, about 400 prisoners led by Erhard Brauny left the
Rottleberode subcamp on 4 April 1945 in a plan to move them to
Neuengamme concentration camp, which was still operational. When the transport reached the town of
Gardelegen, the prisoners were joined by additional "evacuation transports". The prisoners, now numbering over 1000, could be moved no further due to damaged railway lines. There they were simply murdered by their captors at
Isenschnibber Barn on 13 April 1945.
Investigating Team 6822, part of the U.S. War Crimes Program to create legal standards and judicial systems to prosecute Nazi crimes, quickly began to identify the perpetrators. By May 25, 1945, the investigations were complete and a report was sent to General
Simpson, Supreme Commander of
United States 9th Army. Many of the suspects were quickly captured and interned. Recorded testimony and photographic evidence formed the basis of the indictments. The process became complicated after the withdrawal of American forces from
Thuringia on July 1, 1945, when the Mittelbau-Dora complex wound up in the
Soviet occupation zone. On September 3, 1946, an exchange of detainees and evidence failed, as no Soviet military representatives appeared at a previously agreed meeting point on the frontier. Corresponding demands to the Soviet military administration remained mostly unanswered. Why Soviet authorities did not cooperate on Dora was unclear, since evidence presented to them on the
Gardelegen Massacre resulted in the transfer of 22 suspects. The notebook of an American investigator indicates the possibility that due to unclear responsibilities among the Soviet investigators and their managers, they could not make a decision. Those Mittelbau-Dora suspects and evidence that were in U.S. custody were finally incorporated into the framework of the
Dachau Trials. Prior to the start of the Dora Trial, 12 former members of the SS administration at Mittelbau-Dora had already been convicted of
war crimes under
British military jurisdiction in the
Belsen Trial. There, 4 defendants were sentenced to imprisonment and 5 acquitted. Protective Custody Camp Leader
Franz Hößler, commander of the
Kleinbodungen subcamp Franz Stofel and his deputy
Wilhelm Dörr were all sentenced to death and executed by hanging on 13 December 1945 in .
Josef Kollmer, the commander of Dora's
SS guard battalion from October, 1943 to May, 1944, was executed in
Kraków on January 28, 1948, following his conviction by Poland's
Supreme National Tribunal in the
First Auschwitz Trial. Former camp commandant
Otto Förschner was executed by U.S. military authorities at
Landsberg Prison on May 28, 1946, following his conviction for war crimes that occurred during his tenure as commander of the
Dachau subcamp of
Kaufering. His successor, former
Auschwitz commandant
Richard Baer was arrested by
West German authorities in 1960, but died of natural causes in 1963, before he was able to appear as a
defendant in the
Frankfurt Auschwitz Trials.
Helmut Bischoff, SS security chief for the
V-weapons program and commander of the
Sicherheitsdienst (SD) detachment in Mittelbau-Dora, was arrested by
Soviet occupation forces in January, 1946 and held in
military detention in
East Germany, and later
Siberia, until 1955.
Karl Kahr, the former SS Camp Physician, was not charged due to his relatively good reputation among the prisoners. He became a witness for the prosecution in the Dora Trial. == Legal basis and indictment ==