SS Court Main Office

Hauptamt SS-Gericht

The Hauptamt SS-Gericht was an office of the SS.
Agency overview
Formed c.1933
Preceding agency
  • SS-Gericht
Dissolved 8 May 1945
Jurisdiction Germany Germany
Occupied Europe
Headquarters Hauptamt SS-Gericht, Karlstraße, Munich
48°8′35.07″N 11°33′58.10″E / 48.1430750°N 11.5661389°E / 48.1430750; 11.5661389
Employees 650
Minister responsible
Agency executives
Parent agency Allgemeine-SS

The SS Court Main Office (German: Hauptamt SS-Gericht) was the legal department of the SS in Nazi Germany. It was responsible for formulating the laws and codes for the SS and various other groups of the police, conducting its own investigations and trials, as well as administering the SS and Police Courts and penal systems.[1]

History

Early in the Nazi regime SS personnel were charged with breaking the law through the performance of their duties at the Dachau concentration camp in 1934. Under such circumstances, the Nazi regime realised it would be expedient to remove the SS and police units from the jurisdiction of the civilian courts. This was achieved with a petition to the Reich Ministry of Justice.

This legal status meant all SS personnel were only accountable to the Hauptamt SS Gericht. This effectively placed the SS above German law and able to live by its own rules and conventions.[2]

Organization

The Hauptamt SS Gericht was an extension of the previous SS Gericht, an organization that administered surveys of the SS and police forces and their codes of honor. The Hauptamt SS Gericht had four departments (German: Ämter or Amtsgruppe):[3]

The Hauptamt SS Gericht headquarters were the high court offices in Munich. The Hauptamt SS Gericht had over 600 lawyers that passed sentences on members of the German armed forces and SS, though Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler would intervene as he saw fit when it came to conviction and the sentencing phase.[4] By 1944, the number of SS-Hauptamt offices within Germany had grown from 8 to 12.

SS and Police Courts

The Hauptamt SS-Gericht administered also 38 regional SS courts throughout Nazi Germany under legal jurisdiction which superseded civilian courts. These laws extended to all SS and police force members operating in Germany or throughout occupied Europe.[5]

The SS and Police Courts were the only authority that could try SS personnel for criminal behaviour. The different SS and Police Courts were as follows:

The one exception to the SS and Police Courts jurisdiction involved members of the SS who were serving on active duty in the regular Wehrmacht. In such cases, the SS member in question was subject to regular Wehrmacht military law and could face charges before a standard military tribunal.[6]

Investigations by Judge Georg Konrad Morgen

In 1943 SS-Sturmbannführer Georg Konrad Morgen, from the Hauptamt SS-Gericht, began investigating corruption and criminal activity within the Nazi concentration camps system. He eventually prosecuted so many SS officers that by April 1944, Himmler personally ordered him to restrain his cases. Among the people he investigated was Karl Otto Koch, the commandant of Buchenwald and Majdanek, and husband of Ilse Koch — as well as Buchenwald's concentration camp doctor Waldemar Hoven, who was accused of murdering both inmates and camp guards who threatened to testify against Koch.

In 1944, while investigating the Auschwitz commander, Rudolf Höss, Morgen's assistant SS-Hauptscharführer Gerhard Putsch disappeared. Some theorized this was a warning for Morgen to ease up on his investigations as the building where his files were stored was burned down shortly thereafter.[7]

Morgen, who had been an SS judge and investigator, later testified at the Nuremberg trials. He claimed that he fought for justice during the Nazi era, and cited his long list of 800 investigations into criminal activity at concentration camps during his two years of activity.[8]

References

  1. McNab, Chris (2009). The SS: 1923–1945, p. 37
  2. McNab, Chris (2009). The SS: 1923–1945, p. 41
  3. McNab. The SS: 1923–1945, p. 41
  4. McNab, Chris (2009). The SS: 1923–1945, pp. 37, 40, 41
  5. Höhne, Heinz. The Order of the Death's Head, The Story of Hitler's SS. London: Pan Books Ltd
  6. McNab. The SS: 1923–1945, p. 41
  7. "SS-Hauptscharfuhrer Konrad Morgen - the Bloodhound Judge". BBC. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  8. Toland, John (1976). Adolf Hitler, pp. 845–846
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