A Serial Killer in Nazi Berlin (34 page)

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Authors: Scott Andrew Selby

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“collapse, the”
(Zusammenbruch)
, 253
colloidal silver, 233
“colonies,” garden area, 5–6
color scheme used by S-Bahn, 47, 50
“Commencement and Duration of the Blackout,” Blackout Regulation, 41
commuter train line in Berlin, 19.
See also
S-Bahn
“compromise,” intelligence community, 256
conditions during blackouts, 2, 11, 18, 35–47, 50, 93, 106, 162, 164, 165, 177, 178, 209
confessions
Heimann, 204–205
Ogorzow, 220, 221–227, 256
connecting the garden and train attacks, 132–142, 148–150, 213, 226
consciousness (loss of) and guillotines, 247–248
control cars, S-Bahn, 153
control of information in Nazi Germany, 108, 123, 124, 125–126, 127, 174, 176, 177, 227
coward, Ogorzow, 94
crimes committed during blackouts, 45–46, 61, 188, 193, 205, 223, 229–231, 237
Criminal Police.
See
Kripo
Criminological Research Institute of Lower Saxony, 127
curfews in Nazi Germany, 144, 147
Czechoslovakia, 75
Dalüge, Kurt (Chief of the Orpo), 114
dangerous gambit (trap set) by Lüdtke, 192–199
Das 12 Uhr Blatt (12 O’Clock Journal)
, 174–175
daylight bombing, 37, 63
death on the train, 101–105.
See also
Franke, Elfriede (murder victim)
Death Rode the Train
(Der Tod fuhr im Zug)
(Alt), 251
death sentence, Nazi Germany, 205, 223, 228, 229, 238, 239, 245, 246
decoys used by Lüdtke, 151–156, 164–165, 170
“Decree Against Public Enemies”
(Volksschädlingsverordnung)
, 45–46
defensive wounds (lack of), 73–74
Demps, Laurenz, 7, 81, 190
denazification questionnaire
(Fragebogen)
, 253, 254
Denmark, xix, 48
Der Westen
(newspaper), 185–187
descriptions of Ogorzow, 82, 85–86, 98, 140, 145, 149, 161, 175, 186, 188, 209, 219–220
desensitized to violence, Ogorzow, 32, 34, 103
detective novels based on German Police, 251–252
detectives.
See
Heuser, Georg Albert; Lüdtke, Wilhelm
detectives on train stations, 151, 154, 157, 184
Deutches Kriminalpolizeiblatt
(Reich Criminal Investigation Department newspaper), 83–84
Deutsche Bundesbahn
, 262
Deutschen Telephonwerken, 99
Diagnose Mord
(“Diagnosis Murder”), Weimann, 262
dictatorship, 113
dissection of Ogorzow, 248
ditching work, Ogorzow, 157–160, 207–208, 209, 211, 213
Ditter, Arthur (Gertrude’s husband), 67, 74–77, 78–80, 140
Ditter, Gertrud (Gertrude’s mother), 75
Ditter, Gertrude “Gerda” (murder victim),
xiii
, xxi, 67–88, 101, 109, 127, 138, 140, 148, 149, 150, 187, 198
Ditter, Helga (Gertrude’s and Arthur’s daughter), 68, 69–70, 70–71, 75, 101
Ditter, Wolfgang (Gertrude’s and Arthur’s son), 68, 69–70, 70–71, 75, 101
DNA testing, 214
Dobler, Jens, 117, 124
Dolgner, Dr., 73
“Do not cry yet,” 21–24.
See also
Nieswandt, Gertrud (attempted murder victim)
doors on S-Bahn, 57, 58, 93–94
Douglas, John, 10
draft, Nazi Germany, 76
drug addicts and serial killers, 139
Düsseldorf, Germany, 157
early Sunday morning attacks, 165–166, 169, 170–173, 184.
See also
Büngener, Elisabeth (murder victim); Ebauer, Hedwig (murder victim); Siewert, Gertrud (murder victim)
East Berlin, 223.
See also
S-Bahn Murderer
Eastern Hanover, Germany, 16
East Germany (German Democratic Republic), 262
East Prussia, 29–30
Ebauer, Hedwig (murder victim),
xiii
, xxi, 172–173, 174
EEGs and guillotined rats, 248
Eichmann, Adolf, 116
Eighth Regulation Implementing the Air Protection Act, 40–42
Einsatzgruppen
(mobile killing squads on the Eastern Front), 114, 257, 258, 260
electric traction motor sounds, S-Bahn, 129–130
engine cars, S-Bahn, 153
enuresis (bed-wetting), serial killers, 30
epilepsy, 137
Erkner S-Bahn station,
xv
, xvii, 175, 185
escalation of violence by Ogorzow, 9–11, 18, 26, 210
eugenics belief, Nazi Germany, 137
euthanization of sick children by Weimann, 261
examinations of bodies.
See
Weimann, Waldemar
excuses for murders, Ogorzow, 228, 232–235
execution of Ogorzow, 245–248, 249
expansion by Nazi Germany, xix–xx, 48–49
expansion joints sound, S-Bahn, 129
ex post facto (“after the fact”) laws, 244
eyewitness evidence, problematic, 161–162
eyewitness identification of Ogorzow, 218–220
family of Ogorzow, 28–29, 69, 97, 122, 131, 193, 208, 209, 235
Fangschleuse S-Bahn station,
xv
, xvii
“fast train”
(Schnellbahn)
, 51
FBI, 10
fear of getting caught, Ogorzow, 17–18, 20, 21, 24, 102, 103, 104–105, 126, 140
Female Criminal Police
(Weiblichen Kriminalpolizei),
152, 153
female police used as decoys, 151–156, 164
Fifth Amendment right to silence, U.S., 216
fight-or-flight response, 19
file of Ogorzow and Lüdtke, 209–211
final murder.
See
Koziol, Frieda (murder victim)
Final Solution of the Jewish question, xx
firearms (none) for female police decoys, 152, 153, 164
fire setting (pyromania), serial killers, 30
first-class transport, S-Bahn, 56
first death on the train, 101–105.
See also
Franke, Elfriede (murder victim)
first early Sunday morning attack, 165–166, 169.
See also
Büngener, Elisabeth (murder victim)
first murder, 67–88.
See also
Ditter, Gertrude “Gerda” (murder victim)
first S-Bahn attack, 48–60.
See also
Kargoll, Gerda (attempted murder victim)
fists attacks by Ogorzow, 17, 26, 27
flashlight harassment by Ogorzow, 7–9, 18, 21, 25, 138, 150, 217, 218
food rations in Nazi Germany, 144
footprints of killer, 200–201, 202–203, 204, 205, 222–223
footrace, 17–20.
See also
Jablinski, Hertha (attempted murder victim)
foreign laborers in Nazi Germany, 145–147
Forensic Institute of the Security Police at the Office of the Reich Criminal Investigations Department, 72–73
forensic pathologist.
See
Weimann, Waldemar
forensics, state of, 89–90
Fragebogen
(denazification questionnaire), 253, 254
France, xix, xx, 18, 33, 48, 49, 62
Franke, Elfriede (murder victim),
xiii
, xxi, 103–105, 106, 107–109, 112, 128, 130, 132, 133, 139, 148, 226
Frankfurt, Germany, 15
Frankfurt University, 121
Freese, Irmgard (murder victim),
xiii
, xxi, 130–131, 132, 133, 138
French Revolution, 223, 247
Frenzel grocery store, Berlin-Friedrichsfelde, 84
Frick, Wilhelm (Minister of the Interior), 113
Friedrichshagen S-Bahn station,
xiii
,
xv
, xvii, 1, 90, 150, 151, 166
Friedrichstraße S-Bahn station, 63
Fürstenwalde S-Bahn station,
xv
, xvii, 165
Fußarzt
(“podiatrist”), 201
Gann, Fritz (friend of Gertrude Ditter), 80
garden area murders,
xiii
, 5–11.
See also
Budzinski, Lina (attempted murder victim); Ditter, Gertrude “Gerda” (murder victim); Jablinski, Hertha (attempted murder victim); Koziol, Frieda (murder victim); Nieswandt, Gertrud (attempted murder victim); Ogorzow, Paul; S-Bahn Murderer; Schuhmacher, Julie (attempted murder victim)
connecting the garden and train attacks, 132–142, 148–150, 213, 226
residents interviewed by Kripo, 190–191
S-Bahn vs., 34, 111, 156, 195
gardening love of Ogorzow, 6, 29
gasoline rationing in Nazi Germany, 52, 201
gassing people developed by Nebe, 257
Geheime Staatspolizei.
See
Gestapo
Gerbert, Mr., 87
German Democratic Republic (East Germany), 262
German National Railroad Company
(Reichsbahn)
, 49–50, 54, 55, 56, 78, 150, 163, 262.
See also
S-Bahn
Germany.
See also
Berlin, Germany; garden area murders; Nazi Germany; S-Bahn; S-Bahn Murderer
chronology of background events (August 1939–July 1941), xix–xx
East Germany (German Democratic Republic), 262

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