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  1. Auschwitz Through the Lens of the SS: Frankfurt Trial. Shortly after World War II, an American intelligence officer living in Germany uncovered a personal album of photographs chronicling SS officers’ activities at Auschwitz-Birkenau. The Museum received this photograph album in 2007.

  2. Otto Moll. SS-Hauptscharführer Otto Moll, the chief of crematories. After the war sentenced to death in the trial of Dachau SS staff. Artur Liebehenschel. SS-Obersturmbannführer Artur Liebehenschel, the second commandant of KL Auschwitz from November 1943 to May 1944. After the war sentenced to death. Maximilian Grabner.

  3. www.wikiwand.com › en › Otto_MollOtto Moll - Wikiwand

    Otto Hermann Wilhelm Moll (4 March 1915 – 28 May 1946) was an SS non-commissioned officer who committed numerous atrocities at the Auschwitz concentration camp during the Second World War. Moll held the rank of SS- Hauptscharführer "Head Section Leader", the equivalent to a US Military Master Sergeant and or British Military Warrant Officer.

  4. In 1945, an American military tribunal sentenced Auschwitz III-Monowitz director Vinzenz Schöttl and Birkenau crematorium boss Otto Moll to death at the trial of the Dachau garrison.

  5. Perhaps the most extraordinary photograph depicts an accordionist leading a sing-along for approximately 70 SS men. In the front row of the group are Höcker, SS-Hauptscharführer Otto Moll (the supervisor of the gas chambers), Höss, Baer, Kramer, Franz Hössler (commander of the female prisoner compound at Birkenau), and Mengele.

  6. In a U.S. Military Court trial in Dachau from November 15 to December 13, 1945, Otto Moll, the first commandant of the Fürstengrube subcamp, was sentenced to death by hanging. 22 The sentence was executed on May 28, 1946.

  7. Auschwitz trial proceedings, Kraków, Poland The Auschwitz trial began on November 24, 1947, in Kraków, when Poland's Supreme National Tribunal tried forty former staff of the Auschwitz concentration camps.The trials ended on December 22, 1947. The best-known defendants were Arthur Liebehenschel, former commandant; Maria Mandl, head of the Auschwitz women's camps; and SS-doctor Johann Kremer.

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