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Heinrich Schmidt

Heinrich Schmidt as defendant, June, 1947

Dr. Ernst Heinrich Schmidt (March 27, 1912 - † November 28, 2000) was a German physician and SS-Hauptsturmführer, employed in a variety of Nazi concentration camps during World War II. He was tried in 1947 and 1975 for complicity in war crimes, but was acquitted both times.

Biography[]

Schmidt was born in Altenburg, Germany. In 1937, while studying at the University of Leipzig to become a medical doctor, he joined the Nazi party (Member No. 555,294) and the SS (Member No. 23,069). At the outbreak of World War II, Schmidt was first assigned to a Waffen-SS military hospital.[1]

In 1941, Schmidt became a camp physician at the Buchenwald concentration camp and then transferred from there to Majdanek concentration camp in June 1942. In October 1943, Schmidt was First Camp Physician at the Gross-Rosen concentration camp and then at Dachau concentration camp in September 1944. Between March 1945 and early April 1945, Schmidt served as camp physician in the Boelke Kaserne subcamp of Mittelbau-Dora in Nordhausen.[2] Near the end of World War II, in the course of the evacuation of staff and prisoners from the Mittelbau, Schmidt wound up at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp on 8 or 9 April 1945.[1]

Heinrich Schmidt

Vans Maienschein, a prosecution witness, points out former camp doctor Heinrich Schmidt at the Dora Trial. September 18, 1947

On April 14, 1945 Belsen was liberated by members of the British Army. Schmidt and Alfred Kurzke testified as witness in the Belsen Trial on 25 October 1945. At this time, he was serving as senior doctor in the Bergen-Belsen displaced persons camp set up by the Allies at Bergen-Belsen. He was later arrested and indicted for war crimes in the Dora Trial, which took place in the context of the Dachau Trials between 7 August 1947 and 30 December 1947. Schmidt was accused of allowing inmates to die by withholding medical care. He was acquitted for lack of evidence.[3]

Schmidt was again indicted and stood trial at the District Court of Düsseldorf for war crimes committed at Majdanek concentration camp. The third Majdanek Trial (Majdanek-Prozess in German) began on November 26, 1975, and lasted 474 sessions, Germany's longest and most expensive trial. All the defendants had been SS staff at Majdanek. Schmidt was accused of at least eight murders through his participation in the selections for the gas chambers. Due to a lack of evidence, Schmidt was acquitted on March 20, 1979 and released on 19 April 1979.[4]

Since 1985, Schmidt lived in Uetze, Germany.[5] He died in Celle in 2000.

Bibliography[]

  • Ernst Klee: Auschwitz, Nazi Medicine and Their Victims. third Edition (Frankfurt am Main: S. Fischer Verlag, 1997) ISBN 3-596-14906-1
  • Ernst Klee: The Encyclopedia of Persons in the Third Reich: Who was Who Before and After 1945 (Frankfurt am Main: Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, 2007) ISBN 978-3-596-16048-8

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Statement by Heinrich Schmidt on October 25, 1945
  2. Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich: Wer war was vor und nach 1945. (Frankfurt am Main, 2007) p. 545
  3. Robert Sigel: In the Interest of Justice: The Dachau War Crimes Trials 1945–48. (Frankfurt am Main, 1992) p. 102
  4. After Acuittals, Judges Retreat into Anteroom - Riots in the Düsseldorf Majdanek Trial, in: Hamburger Abendblatt, Issue 92, April 20, 1979, p. 2
  5. Ernst Klee: Auschwitz, die NS-Medizin und ihre Opfer.(Frankfurt am Main, 1997) p. 57
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