SS DR.HELMUT KNOCHEN-HERBERT HAGEN

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SS DR.HELMUT KNOCHEN-HERBERT HAGEN DOCUMENT

SS DR.HELMUT KNOCHEN/(1910-2003). SS-Standartenführer, involved in the Venlo incident, commander of the security police for occupied France.
Hagen (1913-1999). SS-Sturmbannführer, last head of Department II / 112 Jews, traveled with Eichmann to Haifa and Cairo, sentenced to life in a labor camp in 1955 in the absence of a Paris military tribunal.
Cover letter from Berlin dated September 28th, 1938 regarding the evaluation of the Austria material regarding a Freemason V-man regarding Austrian Jews, BOLD INK SIGNATURES OF HAGEN AND KNOCHEN

Helmut Knochen – was the senior commander of the Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police) and Sicherheitsdienst in Paris during the Nazi occupation of France during World War II.
In March 1947, a British Military Court sentenced Knochen to death for the murder of a number of British parachute troops on or around 9 August 1944. However, on 16 September 1948, the sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, and further commuted in February 1950 to 21 years imprisonment. He was extradited to France in 1954 and sentenced to death. The sentence was later commuted to life imprisonment. After he obtained a presidential pardon in 1958, Knochen was released on November 28, 1962 by President Charles de Gaulle,

Herbert Martin Hagen (20 September 1913 – August 1999) was an SS-Sturmbannführer of Nazi Germany.

Hagen served as a personal assistant to the SS police chief in France. In 1980, he was sentenced in Cologne, West Germany, to twelve years imprisonment, for his complicity in the murder of thousands of Jews and others deported from France during World War II; two other former Paris Gestapo men are tried and sentenced at the same time: Kurt Lischka, Gestapo chief in Paris, who was sentenced to 10 years, and Ernst Heinrichsohn, who worked in the Gestapo’s “Jewish affairs” department in Paris, sentenced to six years.