| Literature DB >> 33170948 |
Jens Westemeier, Sebastian Scheib, Hendrik Uhlendahl, Dominik Gross, Mathias Schmidt1.
Abstract
During the Second World War, the German Wehrmacht and the SS tested various chemical warfare agents on prisoners of concentration camps. The SS needed a pathologist to do this. Therefore, Reichsarzt SS Ernst-Robert Grawitz recruited the 32-year-old Hans Wolfgang Sachs. Despite his position as senior pathologist at the office of the Reichsarzt SS, Sachs was spared interrogation and prosecution after 1945, although the prosecution presented a document about chemical warfare and human experiments during the Nuremberg medical trial. In this, Sachs was named as a participant in so-called "N-Stoff" (chlorine trifluoride) experiments. Little is known about Sachs to this day. This article is intended to close this gap. Of particular interest are the motives and reasons why Sachs joined the party and the SS, as well as his career after 1945.Entities:
Keywords: Chemical warfare agents; Concentration camps; National Socialism; Pathology; World War II
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33170948 PMCID: PMC8571219 DOI: 10.1007/s00292-019-00737-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathologe ISSN: 0172-8113 Impact factor: 1.011
Fig. 1Grawitz’s letter of 23.06.1944 concerning the takeover of Sachs by the Waffen-SS [20]
Fig. 2Compensation application of 31.01.1955 [55]. Sachs refers to himself as a member of the Wehrmacht, the term “SS” is deliberately not mentioned