Execution of Auschwitz officer who threw kids into fire alive & unleashed dogs on women

1933, Germany. From its rise to power, the Nazi regime builds a series of incarceration sites which are formally called “concentration camps” and their major purpose during the 1930s is to imprison and intimidate the leaders of political, social, and cultural movements that the Nazis perceive to be a threat to the survival of the regime.
The Second World War begins on 1 September 1939 and the SS, which is responsible for the management of concentration camps, expands their functions turning them into sites where Nazi authorities kill targeted groups of people. One such camp is Auschwitz, established in May 1940, around 60 km west of Polish Krakow.
Between 1940 and 1945, a minimum of 1,3 million people will be deported to Auschwitz and of these, at least 1,1 million will be murdered. The chief of the camp’s crematories who supervises the unit which burns the corpses of innocent men, women, and children in pits, on pyres, or in the crematorium furnaces, is Otto Moll. Otto Hermann Wilhelm Moll was born on 4 March 1915 in the town of Hohen Schönberg, then part of the German Empire.
When on 30 January 1933 President von Hindenburg appointed Adolf Hitler chancellor of Germany, Otto Moll was 17 years old. He trained as a gardener and on 30 May 1935, he joined the SS, which in the Nazi state controlled the German police forces and the concentration camp system.
From 1939, the SS assumed responsibility for “solving” the so-called Jewish Question and after 1941, its leadership planned, coordinated and directed the so-called Final Solution of the Jewish Question. This “solution” was the annihilation of the European Jews, which we now refer to as the Holocaust. Otto Moll was musically active and became a member of the SS marching battalion orchestra which performed in SS barracks or in public places.
When during a journey with this marching band from Bernau to Oranienburg in January 1937, the SS truck collided with a car, one SS man was killed, and Moll was critically injured. He was treated in Bernau Hospital for several months, suffering from a fractured skull and losing an eye. It has been suggested that because of the accident he suffered from frontal lobe syndrome – an organic damage that can manifest itself in psychotic or psychopathic behavior.
As a result, Moll became a physically and mentally ill person who was deliberately exploited as a murderer by the criminal Nazi regime. From 1938, Otto Moll was employed at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp where he worked as the head of a gardeners’ work detail and was protected by Rudolf Höss who belonged to the camp’s leadership The Second World War started on the 1st of September 1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland.
The last operational Polish unit surrendered on the 6th of October the same year and in May 1940, around 60 km west of Krakow, the Germans established Auschwitz concentration camp. The direct reason for the establishment of the camp was the fact that mass arrests of Poles were increasing beyond the capacity of existing “local” prisons.
The camp’s commandant became Otto Moll’s former superior Rudolf Höss and the first 30 prisoners, the German criminals with green badges, arrived in Auschwitz on the 20th of May 1940 from the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. The greens, as these 30 German prisoners were called, did much to establish the sadism of early camp life, which was directed particularly at Polish inmates.
The first transport of Polish male prisoners arrived in Auschwitz on 4 June 1940, when the Germans deported a group of 728 Poles from the prison in Tarnów to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Among them were soldiers of the September campaign, members of the underground independence organizations, secondary school pupils and students, as well as a small group of Polish Jews. They received numbers from 31 to 758.
On the 2nd of May 1941, the camp’s commandant Rudolf Höss brought Otto Moll to Auschwitz who lived in the camp with his wife and two daughters. His first wife Elli had also worked in the concentration camp but died of blood poisoning in 1940. Moll remarried only a few weeks after her death. Many former Auschwitz prisoners described Otto Moll as the worst SS-man in the entire camp.
He distinguished himself with the particular sadism towards the prisoners and because he had a glass eye, he had a nickname “Cyclops “. A former Auschwitz prisoner Benjamin Jacobs later recalled: “”His straight blond hair was cut short. In his chiselled face were set a pair of cold blue eyes. Only one of them was real. When he spoke, only the live eye shifted. There seemed to be no real feeling in the heart beating beneath his bulging chest.
” At Auschwitz, Moll first supervised agricultural commando. Józef Głuszak, who worked in the Moll’s commando and survived the Holocaust, later recalled: “Moll was particularly happy to persecute us and drive us to labor. I remember once a prisoner came to a hothouse and picked some onion leaves.
Moll noticed that, summoned the prisoner, took him to a barrel with fermenting human fertilizer, put him there head down, then took him out and told the other prisoners to move him to a water pool located nearby. The prisoner didn’t report for work the next day. It was clear that he had died. Together with this unit, we planted cabbage and cauliflower. Moll was eager to tire us down and cracked the whip all the time.
I witnessed the following situation: Moll was asking, “Are you cold?” Of course everyone said “yes”. It was very cold at that time. We wore pants and shirts, without jackets. Cold days gave us a really hard time. Moll ordered a prisoner to run circles around our unit and the SS man guarding us, who stood nearby, fired single shots at the runner. Some ten prisoners were shot dead that way on the spot.
” Thanks to his drive and toughness, in June 1942 Otto Moll became the leader of the notorious penal company to which the prisoners were assigned for various reasons, including escape attempts, contact with civilians or the illegal possession of food, money and additional clothing. Assignment to the penal company, situated in infamous Block 11, lasted from one month to one year and the prisoners were not only completely isolated from other prisoners but had to perform the hardest labor and were continually beaten by the SS men and prisoner functionaries.
The Auschwitz subcamp Birkenau, which was also a killing centre and played a central role in the German effort to kill the Jews of Europe, started functioning on 1 March 1942. At Birkenau, Moll then devoted himself primarily to the killing of people. Jewish deportees arriving at Auschwitz-Birkenau immediately underwent selection.
The selection procedure was carried out on the ramps as follows: families were divided after leaving the train cars and all the people were lined up in two columns. The men and older boys were in one column, and the women and children of both sexes in the other. Next, the people were led to the camp doctors and other camp functionaries conducting selection.
They judged the people standing before them on sight and, sometimes eliciting a brief declaration as to their age and occupation, decided whether they would live or die. Henryk Mandelbaum, who survived Auschwitz, later recalled: “People believed that it was indeed a bath, especially if it was presented as such during the journey or after one’s arrival at Auschwitz; the latter was the specialty of Hauptscharführer Otto Moll, who would give speeches and tell people that they had come to perform well-paid work. And although
they had left valuable property behind, they would be able settle down here and earn new fortunes. Thereafter he instructed them to undress, saying that they would receive fresh clothes because – since they were going to a place where cleanliness must be maintained – it was necessary to prevent the spread of disease.
The people – easily fooled – believed all that he said and proceeded to take off their clothes, thereafter entering the fake “bath”. They were not allowed to take any valuables, only towels and soap. The Germans told them that they would be given back all the valuables that they had left in the changing- room. And when the gas chamber was full and the doors closed tightly shut, they would pour in the Zyklon B, which caused people to suffocate.
At the same time – since the transports included people who were elderly, sick and handicapped – a fake Red Cross ambulance would drive around, with a crew of two SS men, in order to deceive the prisoners. The sick would be put in the ambulance, and thereafter taken to be gassed.” The victims were dead within 20 minutes.
Johann Kremer, the SS doctor who oversaw the gassings, testified that the shouting and screaming of the victims could be heard through the opening and it was clear that they fought for their lives. On one occasion the truck full of prisoners was being driven to a gas chamber but turned so suddenly that a woman’s child about 3 years old fell out.
Otto Moll, who was driving behind the truck, took the child by the neck and then by the leg, and smashed his head against a guardhouse wall killing him on the spot. Moll then drove up to the truck and threw the child’s lifeless corpse to his mother. For his merits in killing innocent men, women and children, Hitler decorated Moll with the War Merit Cross, First Class with Swords on the 20th of April 1943.
This even casts a significant light on his importance in the extermination of Jews. In addition to him, only Commandant Höss and Josef Klehr, the head of the SS disinfection commando, were decorated with this medal among the Auschwitz personnel. From September 1943 to May 1944, Moll was the first commandant of the Fürstengrube and Gleiwitz I which were Auschwitz sub-camps.
The prisoners worked repairing damaged sides of cars, in the machine shop and smithy, and building roads and a nearby airstrip. From the late summer of 1944, they were taken out to work on two 12-hour shifts. Samuel Stoeger, who during the German occupation of Poland lost his whole family of 13 people, including his wife and child, recalled the following after the war: “German foremen who supervised our work in the repair shops would report us to the camp authorities for the most trivial offences committed during work, such as trying to get warm by the radiator or eating some scraps found somewhere. Based on
these reports, Moll organized the “payment”, that is the punishment of flogging, every Sunday at noon. It was administered on two sawbuck tables built specially for this purpose. The floggings were carried out by the designated prisoner functionaries or SS men. The usual punishment was 50 lashes. Moll personally passed the sentences.
” Stoeger continued: “Moll would personally shoot prisoners for most trivial offences. He once caught me boiling potatoes which I had been given at the repair shop. He assumed that I had stolen them from the camp warehouse and didn’t believe my explanations. He beat me up and knocked me around, set the dog on me, and then told me to run “for freedom” ,as he called it, pointing to the wired fence around the camp.
When I refused, he threatened me with a revolver. Having no choice, I ran up to the wires and started climbing. Four shots were immediately fired from the guard tower. None of them hit me. At the almost exact same moment Moll’s deputy drove by. He supervised our work in the repair shops and knew that I was a hardworking man. He pleaded with Moll on my behalf and saved me from death.
Such incidents were very frequent. The day before my incident Moll shot two of my friends from Kraków in that manner.” Prisoners who for some reason had no other assignment were consigned by Otto Moll to the pointless carrying of stones from a nearby slag heap to the camp and back again. Almost a hundred Gleiwitz I prisoners died as a result of mistreatment, hunger, and backbreaking labor.
In May 1944 Otto Moll returned to the Auschwitz-Birkenau, where he was appointed the director of all crematoria by the camp’s commandant Rudolf Höss. During this period, the extermination of Hungarian Jews was to take place. Moll was aware of the fact that the planned ten to fifteen thousand corpses per day would overwhelm the crematoria’s ovens.
So just before the arrival of the Hungarian transports, Moll ordered fire pits to be dug alongside crematoria which he provided with a gutter system of his own design. People from the incoming transports were to be shot and then burned in these fire pits. In this way, fat from the burning corpses would be drained off, collected, picked up by the inmates with buckets and tipped into the flames to burn.
Moll often strolled around the crowd of arrivals scheduled for gassing, observed them undressing and lured small children away from their mothers with sweets in order to throw them outside into the boiling fat of the fire pits. On a few occasions he was seen picking children up by their hair and then holding them suspended while he shot them.
When there were so many incoming transports that the gas chambers and crematoria were incapable of containing all the new arrivals, Moll’s fire pits to burn corpses were used. The excess people were generally shot, one at a time, often by Moll himself or by the other SS men, especially Erich Muhsfeldt.
When some people asked Moll to spare their life, he replied “An order is an order” and then killed them without any remorse. The Jews were shot in the back of their head and dropped into fire. It sometimes happened that some prisoners put up a fight or children cried. As a punishment, Moll would throw them into the burning pits alive. Moll often led attractive Jewish women to the edge of the fire pits to enjoy their fear.
He would whisper lewd words into their ears, then shoot them in the back of the head and drop them into the fire. Another of Moll’s specialties was setting his dog on naked women. The dog would bound towards them in a rage, chasing them toward the fire pits while biting and snapping at their legs and buttocks. Moll would then shoot the women in their stomach so that they would fall over and watch them burn alive.
The fire pits were also used for smaller groups of victims consisting of up to 200 people. The reason was that using Zyklon B gas for such a small number of people was considered uneconomical and therefore wasteful. As a result, the Germans drove the Hungarian children as well as the sick, old and disabled people by truck to the fire pits where Moll and his colleagues, who had been instructed to shoot them by hand or throw them alive into the flames, were waiting for them.
During 8 weeks from May 15 to July 9, 1944, Hungarian gendarmerie officials, under the guidance of German SS officials, deported around 424,000 Jews from Hungary to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where, upon arrival and after selection, SS functionaries killed the majority of them in gas chambers.
After the war, Holocaust survivor Henryk Tauber recalled that Moll would take gold items out of the box where the valuables stolen from people from transports were stored and took them for himself in his briefcase. From the things that were left by gassed people, he took furs and lots of food, especially fats. With a smile on his face, he would then say to the SS men around him: “One should store up on food supplies because lean times would come someday.
” As the head of all crematoria, Moll also directed the work of the Jewish Sonderkommando which was a unit of camp’s prisoners forced to help with the disposal of gas chamber victims. Those who refused to do the terrible work of the Sonderkommando, Moll would personally throw alive into burning furnaces.
The prisoners did not consider him a human and would call him “ Schweinemetzger” which meant “pig butcher”. One Holocaust survivor later testified: “Moll was called a pig butcher because he was not a human being, but a butcher who threw children alive into the fire.” On one occasion when he found a gold ring and watch in the possession of one of the members of the Jewish Sonderkommando, he poured petrol over him and put him into cold furnace.
The prisoner’s name was Lejb and he was 20 years old. The aforementioned Auschwitz survivor Henryk Tauber later recalled what followed: “Underneath, there was an ashpit, where petrol was poured and flames went up to the retort in which Lejb was locked. After a few minutes, the furnace was opened and Lejb, covered in burns, came out running.
He was then ordered to run around the crematorium yard and shout that he was a thief. Then, he was told to climb the crematorium barbed wire fence, which was not electrified by day. When he got to the top of the fence, Moll shot him dead.” Moll was also known for being an excellent marksman and when he felt that the prisoners from the Sonderkommando were not working properly, he would shoot them from considerable distances.
One of very few survivors of the Sonderkommando, a Slovak prisoner Filip Müller, described Moll’s atrocities in the greatest detail. Among other things, Müller reported on the sadistic death torture of “frog swimming” practiced by Otto Moll: Moll chased selected prisoners into one of the extinguishing ponds next to the crematoria and forced them at gunpoint to swim there, croaking constantly, until they died of exhaustion.
Müller also recalled how Otto Moll had invented camp games such as “brick-bashing” in which two groups of prisoners had to smash as many bricks as possible for a certain amount of time and the losing team was then shot on the spot by Moll. Among Moll’s many sadistic specialties also belonged beating people with clubs and iron bars or throwing them against electric fences.
After the end of the extermination of Hungarian Jews, Moll returned to the position of the head of the Gleiwitz I sub-camp. In mid-January 1945, as Soviet forces approached the Auschwitz concentration camp complex, the SS began evacuating Auschwitz and its subcamps.
SS units forced nearly 60,000 prisoners to march west from the Auschwitz camp system. These forced marches of concentration camp prisoners became known as death marches. The prisoners had to march over long distances under guard and in extremely harsh conditions. Inmates suffered from the cold weather, starvation, and exposure on these marches.
Otto Moll let one such death march and in February 1945 he arrived in Kaufering which was the common name of a system of eleven subcamps of the Dachau concentration camp system. The prisoners deported to each of 11 subcamps had to construct the accommodation themselves. The resulting huts, partially buried for camouflage from aerial reconnaissance, were completely inadequate for the weather conditions.
Rain and snow leaked through the earthen roofs, and vermin infested the huts. Prisoners had to sleep on straw that had been spread on the floor. What little food the prisoners did have, was taken by the SS guards and those who were sick, were fed even less. There were even incidents of cannibalism, and some prisoners were so desperate to escape from their horrible reality that they would try to commit suicide, by throwing themselves into the electrical fencing.
At Kaufering number 2, Moll was a camp leader responsible for billeting, feeding, and the clothing of prisoners, as well as sanitary conditions, labor commitments and transfer of sick prisoners. However, he abused and killed prisoners as well as willfully neglecting their care. When 3 of the prisoners who were performing labor one day in March 1945 were preparing to cook some potatoes, Moll took a stick and beat two of them. He said to the third: “ You, you young pig. You were cooking potatoes, too. I’ll show you.
”He then beat the third prisoner so severely that he broke the stick and the beaten prisoner spent two weeks in the hospital. When 2 passers-by stopped and saw how Moll had been beating the prisoner, he ran out and said: “ You should be glad that the Jews are punished!” On another occasion, in April 1945 Moll pushed a Russian with a board and then beat him over the head with a rock until he fell to the ground.
The dead Russian was then carried away on a stretcher out into the woods. At another time in February 1945, Moll struck a woman with a stick many times. The subcamps of Kaufering were liberated between the 24th and 27th of April 1945 by the Seventh United States Army. To prevent the liberation of the surviving inmates, Otto Moll had forced prisoners on a death march to the Dachau concentration camp.
A transport which Moll accompanied left Kaufering camp number 2 on 25 or 26 April 1945. There were about 150 prisoners in the transport and Moll shot 26 of them who had collapsed due to exhaustion. Several of these were Russians and Poles. On the 29th of April 1945, Otto Moll arrived at Dachau and left the following day with the formation of SS personnel, marching in the direction of Tyrol.
The formation soon dissolved, and he surrendered to the Americans on 3 or 4 May 1945, near Bad Tolz. Finally Otto Moll had to face justice and pay for his crimes. From 15 November 1945 he was tried at the first Dachau trial which was held within the compound of the former Dachau concentration camp.
During the trial Moll lied claiming that there was no shooting or mistreatments during the death march he led from Kaufering to Dachau. He also claimed that the prisoners left Kaufering 2 with sufficient provision for 2 days and he personally obtained additional food for half a day from Dachau. In reality, the prisoners got no food at all. Molls’ crimes at Auschwitz were not part of the indictment and he was never prosecuted for them.
When asked about his stay at Auschwitz, Moll claimed that he had served there only as a gardener and never had contact with prisoners. On the 13th of December 1945, The US Military Tribunal found Otto Moll guilty of fatally shooting 26 prisoners who had collapsed from exhaustion during the death march from Kaufering and sentenced him to death by hanging.
On the 28th of May 1946, Otto Moll, then 31 years old, was executed in the courtyard of Landsberg prison. There were no tears shed for Otto Moll. Thanks for watching the World History Channel be sure to like And subscribe and click the Bell notification icon so you don’t miss our next episodes we thank you and we’ll see you next time on the channel.
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