Sixteen wounded prisoners were sent to the
Gestapo hospital, where six subsequently died (including the 10-year-old Erwina, who died due to burns several weeks later). The other 28 were first imprisoned in the police building and, after a few days, sent to the
Victoriaschule, where they were interrogated and tortured. Some 300 to 400 Polish citizens of Danzig were also held there. was tried on 8 September, a second group of 10, who recovered in the hospital, on 30 September. All were sentenced to death as
illegal combatants under the German special military penal law of 1938. The sentence was demanded by the prosecutor
Hans-Werner Giesecke and declared by presiding judge , vice-president of the
Oberlandesgericht Danzig (Higher Regional Court of Danzig). Twenty-eight of the judgements were countersigned, and thus became legally valid, by General
Hans Günther von Kluge, the further 10 by Colonel
Eduard Wagner. A clemency appeal was rejected by General
Walther von Brauchitsch. The prisoners were mostly executed by firing squad led by SS-
Sturmbannführer Max Pauly (later commandant of the
Neuengamme concentration camp) on 5 October and buried in a mass grave at the cemetery of
Danzig-Saspe (Zaspa). Wagner, a conspirator in the
20 July plot later committed suicide on 23 July 1944, after the plan's failure. Kluge killed himself on 19 August 1944. Pauly was executed by the British for other crimes in 1946, and Brauchitsch died in British custody while awaiting trial for war crimes in 1948. However, Giesecke and Bode were never held responsible for this episode or held accountable for the executions. They were
denazified after the war and continued their careers as lawyers in Germany. Both died of natural causes in the 1970s. Only in 1997–1998 did the German court at
Lübeck (the
Große Strafkammer IIb and the
Dritte Große Strafkammer) invalidate the 1939 Nazi sentence, citing among the reasons that the special military penal law had only taken effect in Danzig on 16 November 1939 and charged the presiding judge with negligence of his duties. The decision of the German court occurred thanks to the work of a German author,
Dieter Schenk, who published a monograph on the defence of the post office and referred to the execution of the defenders as
judicial murder (
Justizmord). Schenk stresses the commanding role of Danzig police forces, which made a Wehrmacht court martial not competent to convict the defenders. Instead, the Free City of Danzig's penal law would have been applicable, without the option of a death penalty. In 1979, the was unveiled in
Gdańsk. In 2012 the Polish rock/metal band has written a song titled "Obrońca Poczty w Gdańsku" ("Defender of the Post Office in Danzig"). The defence of the post office is dramatised in the first episode of the 2019 British war drama series
World on Fire. In 2021, the solo board game "Soldiers in Postmen's Uniforms" was published by Dan Verssen Games letting the player "recreate the historic accomplishment of the Polish postal workers by defending the post office during the day-long siege." == See also ==