SS-
Brigadeführer and
Generalmajor der Polizei,
Franz Kutschera, became
SS and Police Leader of the
Warsaw District on 25 September 1943. During his earlier posting in the
Mogilev District of the
Soviet Union he proved himself as a ruthless officer, prone to brutal and unscrupulous methods. Soon after his arrival in Warsaw he stepped up
terror measures directed against the
civilian population. The number of
public executions and
łapanka round-ups were increased, and lists of
hostages to be shot in reprisal for civil disobedience or any attack on a German soldier were published daily. These actions, based on a
decree by
Hans Frank, were intended to crush the will to resist among the Polish population. As a result, the Polish underground leadership included Kutschera in its "Operation Heads" list. Kutschera's whereabouts in Warsaw were a closely guarded secret but were discovered by Aleksander Kunicki (code name "Rayski"), head of intelligence of the Agat company, while he was investigating two other assassination targets: Dr
Ludwig Hahn,
Kommandeur of the
Sicherheitspolizei and the
Sicherheitsdienst (SD) in occupied Warsaw and SS-
Sturmbannführer Walter Stamm. In the course of his surveillance of the area around the
Gestapo HQ on Aleje Szucha, Rayski one day noticed an
Opel Admiral limousine entering the drive of the building at
Aleje Ujazdowskie number 23, which was then the SS headquarters in Warsaw (and now houses the Hungarian Embassy). The SS-man who emerged from the car wore the insignia of a general, and Rayski began to monitor his arrivals and departures from the building. The SS-man was soon identified as Kutschera, who actually lived only 150 metres away, at Aleja Róż number 2. Rayski also discovered that despite the short distance from his home to the SS headquarters, Kutschera always used his car to get there. ==Preparations==