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Authors: Scott Andrew Selby

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homicides handled by, 14, 71, 97, 112
husbands of victims interviewed by, 74–77, 78–80, 198
identification of Ogorzow by victims, 218–220
“immorally harassed,” 83
interrogation of Ogorzow, 216–220
Jews as attacker theory, 143–145
lead cable found by, 98–100, 110–111
murders handled by, 14, 71, 97, 112
news release sent out by, 84–86
Peeping Tom caught by, 205
plain clothes worn by, 252
police custody of Ogorzow, 207–236
press release following Ogorzow’s execution, 249–250
push to catch the killer, 183–191, 222–223
questioning of Ogorzow, 209–220
racial theory of crime, 124–125, 143–147, 211
railroad personnel interviewed by, 189, 207–208, 209
red herring (shoes), 200–206, 222–223
Reich Criminal Investigation Department newspaper
(Deutches Kriminalpolizeiblatt)
, 83–84
Reichskriminalpolizeiamt
(RKPA), 116
rewards offered by, 81–83, 87, 88, 127, 140, 174, 185, 187
Serious Crimes Unit, 14, 16, 112, 220
sexual offender announcement, 83–84
shoeprints/footprints of killer, 200–201, 202–203, 204, 205, 222–223
spy as attacker theory, 145
SS membership required, 120
suspects, wrong kind, 143–147
ticket inspector as attacker theory, 181–182
time cards of S-Bahn workers reviewed by, 189–190
warrant discs for identification, 72
Zach (Kripo Criminal Commissioner), 71–72, 74, 107–108, 110, 133
Kristallnacht
(Night of Broken Glass), 33, 103, 114
Kröber, Hans-Ludwig, 134
Küstrin, Germany, 158
labor deployment in Nazi Germany, 144–145, 146
lead cable found by Kripo, 98–100, 110–111
lead cable used by Ogorzow, 26, 89, 90, 94, 95, 96, 98–99, 108, 110, 138, 225–226
leaving work unnoticed, Ogorzow, 157–160, 207–208, 209, 211, 213
Libya, xx
Lichtenberg, Berlin, 52–53
Liebetraut, Mrs., 87–88
lies told in his confession, Ogorzow, 224–225
Life
magazine, 45–46, 64
logo, S-Bahn, 50
London bombed by Nazi Germany, xx, 36
Lüdtke, Edith (Wilhelm’s daughter), 120
Lüdtke, Johanna (Wilhelm’s mother), 15
Lüdtke, Karl Johan (Wilhelm’s father), 15
Lüdtke, Wilhelm (Kripo Police Commissioner), xxii
assaults to rapes to murders, 140–141
attacker with detailed knowledge of Kripo’s operations, 191
“Attacks on the S-Bahn” article published, 174–175
back-to-back criminal offenses as unusual, 142
catching the killer, importance, 145, 147
confession by Ogorzow, 220, 221–227, 256
connecting the garden and train attacks, 132–142, 148–150, 213, 226
dangerous gambit (trap set) by, 192–199
decoys used by, 151–156, 164–165, 170
detectives on train stations, 151, 154, 157, 184
female police used as decoys, 151–156, 164
file of Ogorzow and, 209–211
firearms (none) for female police decoys, 152, 153, 164
Gestapo vs. Kripo, 116, 117
Goebbels and, 174, 176, 177–178
health conditions of killer as possible motive, 137
Heydrich and, 120, 127, 164, 183, 223
Himmler and, 164, 183
job security (lack of), 16, 119–120
male police in drag used as decoys, 164–165, 170
motive of crimes, 135–138
Nazi Party and, 14–15, 16, 113, 119–120
Nebe and, 119, 120, 127, 133, 183, 223
newspaper article permission, 184–187
police monitoring (ceasing of), rumor spread by, 194–195, 198
police resources expended on case, 192, 194, 195, 222
promotion of, 252
rationalization of Koziol’s murder, 198–199
roundups of train riders at key times, 184
Schlesische Bahn
route monitored by, 150–155, 157
secrecy about S-Bahn Murderer, 108, 123, 124, 125–126, 127, 174, 176, 177, 192, 227, 249
sexual motive possibility, 137–139
skulls of victims used in interrogation, 221–222, 224, 225
SS member, 252, 253
SS member as suspect, 162–164
uniform of attacker focus, 161–164
volunteer program authorized by Goebbels, 176–182, 189
Lüdtke, Wilhelm (personal)
Amalia (Wilhelm’s wife), 120
background of, 14–16, 112–113, 120–121, 252
death of, 256
Gerda (Wilhelm’s daughter), 120
Lüdtke, Wilhelm (post WWII)
BECRIPPLE-2 (cryptonym), 255–256
BESMIRCH-2 (cryptonym), 255
CAUTERY-4 (cryptonym), 255
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) undercover asset, 254–256
denazification process, 253, 254
“Ernst Hartmann,” 255
Hauptsturmführer
, 252, 253, 260
pension, 254, 255
private detective, 254
retirement, 253–254
uniform worn by, 252, 253, 260
Luxembourg, Germany, xx, 48, 49
MacDonald, J. M., 30
“MacDonald Triad,” 30
Maginot Line, 48
male police in drag used as decoys, 164–165, 170
maps
Berlin S-Bahn (1939),
xiv–xv
murders and attempted murders,
xiii
Marenholtz, Freiherr von (Dr.), 241, 243
masturbation, 241
Mathes, Paul, 62
Matuska, Szilveszter, 137
medical excuses for murders, 232–235
Meier, Hermann, 36.
See also
Göring, Hermann (Reichsmarschall)
membership pin worn by Nazis, 31
mental illness (insanity) defense, 233–234, 239–242, 243
minor crimes confession by Ogorzow, 217–218
Minsk, Belarus, 260, 261
Moabit, Berlin, 236
mobile killing squads on the Eastern Front
(Einsatzgruppen)
, 114, 257, 258, 260
modus operandi, serial killers, 226
Mohr, Lina, 13.
See also
Budzinski, Lina
“moral offenses,” 238–239
Moravia, 258
motive of crimes, 109, 135–138
Muntowo, East Prussia, 29–30
murders and attempted murders (map),
xiii
.
See also
garden area murders; S-Bahn Murderer
murders handled by Kripo, 14, 71, 97, 112
“My Confession” (Ditter, A.), 80
National Institute of Justice, 203–204
National Socialist German Workers’ Party.
See
Nazi Germany
National Socialist People’s Welfare organization
(Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt)
, 70
Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei.
See
NSDAP
Nationalsozialistische Volkswohlfahrt
(National Socialist People’s Welfare organization), 70
Nauen, Germany, 210
Nazi Germany.
See also
Blackout Regulation; garden area murders; Gestapo; Goebbels, Paul Joseph; Heydrich, Reinhard; Himmler, Heinrich; Hitler, Adolf; Kripo; Nebe, Arthur; S-Bahn; S-Bahn Murderer
air raid warning system, 36, 39, 41, 42, 43, 44, 63–65
amnesty for imprisoned Nazis, 210, 236–237
Aryan ideal, 115, 143
attention of authorities, avoiding, 79
authoritarian state, 126
bill for execution sent to Ogorzow’s wife, 248
Blitz, xx, 36
child welfare, 69–70, 71
Christmas celebration, 165
chronology of background events (August 1939–July 1941), xix–xx
control of information in, 108, 123, 124, 125–126, 127, 174, 176, 177, 227
curfews in, 144, 147
death sentence, 205, 223, 228, 229, 238, 239, 245, 246
detective novels based on German Police, 251–252
dictatorship, 113
dissection of Ogorzow, 248
draft, 76
eugenics belief, 137
expansion by, xix–xx, 48–49
Female Criminal Police
(Weiblichen Kriminalpolizei)
, 152, 153
food rations in, 144
foreign laborers in, 145–147
gasoline rationing in, 52, 201
guillotine used in executions, 62, 223, 246–247, 258
Holocaust, xx, 114, 116
homosexuals persecuted by, 32, 165
informants in, 88
Jews persecuted in, xx, 32–33, 65, 103, 114, 116, 124, 143–145, 211, 228
labor deployment in, 144–145, 146
London bombed by, xx, 36
Lüdtke and Nazi Party, 14–15, 16, 113, 119–120
membership pin worn by Nazis, 31
mobile killing squads on the Eastern Front
(Einsatzgruppen)
, 114, 257, 258, 260
“moral offenses,” 238–239
BOOK: A Serial Killer in Nazi Berlin
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