Schurch was arrested in
Rome in March 1945, and charged with nine counts of treachery and one count of desertion. He was tried by
court martial at the
Duke of York's Headquarters in
Chelsea, London, in September 1945, with Major
Melford Stevenson presiding. He was defended by Alexander Brands
KC. Schurch was found guilty of all counts and received the mandatory death sentence. Schurch was
hanged on 4 January 1946 at
HM Prison Pentonville, at the age of 27. His execution was carried out by
Albert Pierrepoint, who had hanged
William Joyce the previous day for high
treason. Schurch was the only British soldier executed for treachery committed during the war. However,
Duncan Scott-Ford, a
merchant seaman, and civilians
George Johnson Armstrong and
Oswald John Job were also hanged for treachery, and New Zealand-born
Captain Patrick Stanley Vaughan Heenan of the
British Indian Army was convicted of
espionage, and shot by a guard.
Harold Cole, a British POW who betrayed members of the
French Resistance, was shot dead by the French police in January 1946, a month after he escaped from custody. ==References==