Within hours, a company of about 50 men from the 258th Battalion led by
Petras Polekauskas arrived in Glitiškės. The Polish partisans were no longer there. Upon their arrival in Glitiškės, the Lithuanian policemen collected the dead. Then Polekauskas ordered them to gather the manor's workers, who were mainly people living near the manor (the so-called Glitiškės Annex and the () village), as well as some random people. In total, a group of 40 people were gathered near the manor. They were interrogated by Lithuanian policemen, who demanded information in Lithuanian about the direction of the Polish unit's departure. Only Władysław Klukowski answered this question in Lithuanian, thanks to which he was spared; the others were shot. Three people were not immediately killed: Józef Bałendo, Józef Klukowski, and Wanda Bałendówna. Józef Bałendo, who was wounded in the hand and covered with other bodies, survived, slipping out of the execution site unnoticed. The residents of the manor itself, which included several families and a group of
Ursuline nuns, were spared, but the estate's administrator, Edward Żywiecki, was severely beaten. According to some witnesses, they were spared because the Dutch agricultural instructor stood up for them.
Jonas Žvinys, a Lithuanian parish priest from Dubingiai who happened to be passing by on his way to Vilnius, said a prayer for the dead. Lithuanian police officers brought about eight men from village and ordered them to dig a mass grave. While they did so, the policemen killed Klukowski and Bałendówna, the two wounded victims who had not escaped. After the massacre, the policemen took the belongings of the killed families and the school building. After the policemen left, the local population fled into the woods, where they hid for the next few days. Some of the local youths joined the Polish partisans. Soon, Poles erected a cross on the spot where the bodies were buried, but after three days, Lithuanians ordered it to be removed. , a member of the
AK, but also the administrator of a group of manors as a representative of the occupational German land management company , was informed of events in Glitiškės via phone and arrived at the scene around 2 pm, a few hours after the massacre. After checking the crime scene, he decided to return to Vilnius immediately. He was stopped by Lithuanian policemen on the way in Paberžė. according to later testimonies of policemen, for hiding AK soldiers. The policemen led Komar out in front of the station, and intended to shoot Komar themselves. But as he attempted to run away, they pierced him with bayonets and bludgeoned him to death with rifle butts. His corpse was robbed and his finger with a gold ring was cut off. They then buried his body near the spot where he died. Wladyslaw Komar was a pre-war citizen of Lithuania, an activist of the Polish minority. After Germany occupied the region in 1941, he took charge of nationalized farms in the Vilnius district. He was one of the few Poles in the administrative apparatus of
Generalbezirk Litauen, dominated by Lithuanians. Thanks to his still pre-war contacts with the Lithuanians, he mediated in attempts to reach an agreement between the Polish underground and the Lithuanians. In the spring of 1944, in the face of the approaching Soviet army, the Germans made attempts to win over local Poles, previously discriminated against. They turned primarily to the brothers Wacław and
Władysław Studnicki, with Komar mediating the talks. Rumors also circulated about the possible annexation of Vilnius to the
General Government. Such an agreement was unequivocally rejected by the Polish underground, but it worried Lithuanian circles. Komar became the main enemy for them. This was probably the reason for his murder by Paberžė policemen. According to one account, the assassins of Władysław Komar were convinced that they had killed
Aleksander Krzyżanowski, the commander of the Home Army in the Vilnius region. Józef Koneczny, who had informed policemen of the theft from the estate, also fell victim to the Lithuanian police. Detained as a suspect in Paberžė, he was tortured and then shot. Mikołaj Dubieniecki was also said to have died in similar circumstances at the police station. == Aftermath ==