Albrecht Höhler

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Mug shot of Albrecht Höhler, 1933.[1]

Albrecht "Ali" Höhler (April 30, 1898 – September 20, 1933) was a member of the Red Front Fighters Association (RFB). He is known for the killing of Horst Wessel, a local leader in Berlin of the Nazi Party's SA stormtroopers. After the Nazis came to power, Höhler was taken out of prison and assassinated by the SA. The triggerman was former Imperial German Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia.

Life[]

Born in Mainz,[2] Höhler was a carpenter and a member of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1924. He was also a member of the Red Front Fighter Association and continued to be active in the RFB after its prohibition in 1929.[3] By 1930, he was residing in the Mitte borough of Berlin.[4]

Killing of Horst Wessel[]

The Red Front Fighter Alliance was alerted about a rental dispute between the communist affiliated landlord Elisabeth Salm and her tenant Horst Wessel on January 14, 1930. According to information revealed in court, the notorious SA man was targeted for a "proletarian beating". This action was most likely politically motivated; Horst Wessel was called out as the "murderer of workers" in neighborhood posters put up by the Communist Party. Wessel was involved in numerous violent actions against communists in Berlin and was well known to Nazi Party Gauleiter (regional leader) Joseph Goebbels.[5] Since it was known that Wessel had a firearm, Höhler took his gun in the RFB-led confrontation with Wessel. Höhler later stated in court that he shot Wessel as he reached for his pocket. The seriously injured Wessel died on February 23, 1930, as a result of the gunshot wound.

Imprisonment and assassination[]

Höhler first fled to Prague, but then returned to Berlin where he was arrested.

On September 26, 1930, Höhler was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to six years imprisonment at Wohlau Prison. After the seizure of power by the Nazi Party, Höhler was transferred to a Gestapo prison in Berlin, allegedly to interrogate him about a retrial. He demanded to be returned to Wohlau.

On September 20, 1933, Höhler was taken on the orders of SA Gruppenführer Karl Ernst by three detectives, including the SA-member Willi Schmidt. He was transferred from the police prison at Alexanderplatz on the basis of a Gestapo signed delivery order. Near Potsdamer Platz, several more vehicles approached the prisoner van. The vehicle column drove towards Frankfurt on the Oder. About 12 km from Frankfurt, the column stopped. Höhler was ordered to leave the transport and was led by a group of at least eight people away from the road to a nearby forest. There, Gruppenführer Ernst gave a short speech in which he condemned Höhler to death as murderer of Horst Wessel. Höhler was then shot by several of those present near the Berlin-Frankfurt Chaussee. The body was barely buried on the spot. The official report on the incident allegedly stated that the transport had been intercepted on the street by a group of seven to eight SA men and that the officers had been forced to surrender Höhler under threat of violence, which had then been abducted with an unknown destination.

Later investigation[]

In 1933, the investigation into Höhler's murder was aborted due to political pressure. The official police report to the prosecutor stated that the transport had been intercepted on the street by a group of seven to eight SA men and that the officers had been forced to surrender Höhler under threat of violence, which had then been abducted with an unknown destination.

When the investigation was reopened by the Berlin prosecutor's office in the 1960s, the true course of events was discovered by interrogating Willi Schmidt and Kurt Wendt (the chauffeur of Karl Ernst). At that time, Höhler's murderers were identified as Gruppenführer Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia,[6] Gestapo chief Rudolf Diels (who concealed the facts in his memoirs), Karl Ernst, his adjutant Walter von Mohrenschildt, the SA-Standartenführer Richard Fiedler, the Sturmbannführer Willi Markus, the detectives Maikowski and Walter Pohlenz and possibly Gerd Voss, the legal adviser of the SA group in Berlin-Brandenburg. The fatal shots were probably made by Ernst and Mohrenschildt, according to the findings of the prosecutor. Ernst was said to have organized the murder on the orders of Ernst Röhm, who had in turn received orders from Adolf Hitler that the killer of Wessel was to be summarily shot.[1]

The investigation of the surviving perpetrators Schmidt, Pohlenz, Markus and Fiedler was finally discontinued in 1969 because the prosecutors could only prove aiding and abetting the murder, for which the statute of limitations had already passed by that time.

References[]

  1. ^ a b Siemens, Daniel (2013). "Revenge of the Nazis". The Making of a Nazi Hero: The Murder and Myth of Horst Wessel. London: I.B.Tauris. pp. 185–202. ISBN 978-1-78076-077-3.
  2. ^ Karny, Thomas. "Aus Eifersucht umgelegt". Archiv (in German). Archived from the original on 2013-11-09. Retrieved 2017-12-01.
  3. ^ "Höhler, Albrecht u.a - Lexikon der Politischen Strafprozesse". Lexikon der Politischen Strafprozesse (in German). Retrieved 2017-12-01.
  4. ^ Knobloch, Heinz (1993) Der arme Epstein – Wie der Tod zu Horst Wessel kam. Berlin: Christoph Links Verlag. ISBN 3-86153-048-1
  5. ^ Mix, Andreas. "Wie der Student und Propagandamusiker Horst Wessel zum Vorzeige-Märtyrer der Nazis wurde: Er liebte eine Prostituierte". Berliner Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 2017-12-01.
  6. ^ "Der Nazi-Prinz". Einestages.

External links[]

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