Stein Prison is located in
Stein an der Donau about 80 km west of
Vienna. After the
Anschluss (Nazi German
annexation of Austria) in 1938, the correctional facility which had existed since 1851, was given the designation of a
Zuchthaus by the
Reich Ministry of Justice. Serving a sentence in a
Zuchthaus was the strictest form of penal system in the German Reich in terms of prison conditions, compulsory labour and the rights of the inmates. Stein Prison, which had a capacity of around 1000 inmates, was for men only. In addition to Stein Prison, the city of
Krems an der Donau had another prison, the Krems Prison, with a capacity of around 200 male and female inmates. In 1945, the Krems Prison maintained two small outlets in the villages of
Hörfarth and
Oberfucha. At the time, the inmate population of Stein Prison comprised individuals convicted of a wide range of criminal and
political offences. Among the criminal categories, property-related crimes such as
theft,
burglary and the
handling of stolen goods accounted for the largest share. These were followed by military offences, including
desertion and breaches of guard duty, as well as violent offences such as
murder,
manslaughter,
robbery and
rape.
Economic crimes, particularly infractions against wartime price control regulations, were also represented. Approximately 20 percent of the inmate population had been imprisoned for acts of
civil or political resistance, frequently prosecuted under charges of
high treason. These acts included the dissemination of anti-regime leaflets and the collection of donations for the imprisoned individuals. Additional detainees had been convicted for
resistance activities against German occupation in
Wehrmacht-controlled territories. Roughly ten percent of prisoners had been sentenced for offences such as undermining military morale (
Wehrkraftzersetzung), sabotage, listening to foreign radio broadcasts or making politically subversive statements (
Heimtücke). The political prisoner cohort included opponents of National Socialism from a variety of ideological backgrounds, notably communists, social democrats, and Christian socialists. Of the 1,849 prisoners detained in Stein at the beginning of April 1945, the majority came from the territory of present-day Austria (723 men), from Germany (105), Greece (350), Yugoslavia (274), the Czech Republic (189), Italy (93) and France (49). Other nations account for the remaining 66 individuals. In the final months of 1944, as Allied forces advanced from both the eastern and western fronts, the Reich Ministry of Justice in Berlin initiated deliberations concerning the handling of inmates in National Socialist penal institutions 'in the event of enemy approach.' These considerations culminated in the issuance of a directive in February 1945, which was disseminated to all prison directors. The directive was marked by considerable vagueness and lack of specificity. It stipulated that only inmates serving short-term sentences were to be released, while foreign nationals and individuals classified as 'asocial' or 'politically dangerous' were to be transferred under armed guard away from the frontline. In cases where evacuation proved unfeasible, prisoners were to be handed over to the police 'for elimination' or otherwise 'rendered harmless' through execution by prison personnel. However, at Stein Prison, no evacuation order was received from Berlin despite the imminent threat posed by the advancing
Red Army, which was already nearing Vienna by early April 1945. As a result of the onset of the
Vienna offensive and the consequent requisitioning of all available rail and river transport capacities by both military and civilian authorities, all own attempts of the director of Stein Prison, Franz Kodré, to evacuate the approximately 1,800 to 2,000 inmates westward proved unsuccessful. Compounding the situation was the imminent depletion of food supplies within the facility. In order to avoid the prospect of being compelled to execute the prisoners and in a notably broad interpretation of directives issued from Berlin and the regional administration of
Niederdonau, Kodré initially ordered the release of approximately 80 to 100 inmates convicted of non-political offences on 5 April. This was followed, on the morning of 6 April, by the release of all remaining prisoners, including the political detainees. Simultaneously, the director of the Krems Prison ordered the release of inmates from the main detention centre in Krems as well as its satellite facilities in Hörfarth and Oberfucha. In light of the presence of Soviet forces operating directly south of Vienna, the evacuation of the
Vienna-Josefstadt Prison commenced concurrently on 6 April 1945. As part of this process, political prisoners were released, among them
Leopold Figl, who would later serve as Federal Chancellor of Austria. == The events at Stein Prison ==