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  1. Hans-Adolf-Prützmann. Once trained in sabotage and varying forms of deadly mischief, teams of these Werwolf Kommandos, comprised mostly of HJ volunteers, but commanded by older, battle-experienced hand-picked cadre from the German Army and Waffen-SS, would operate behind the enemy lines as guerrillas, creating deadly mishap amongst the occupying forces, and relaying useful intelligence to a ...

  2. Hans-Adolf Prützmann, born 31 August 1901, Tolkemit, Province of West Prussia, was a Higher SS and Police Leader, as well as an SS-Obergruppenführer. He was a senior Nazi in the administration of Latvia following the German liberation of that country in 1941. (Stalin, at the behest of his many Jewish advisors, had invaded and occupied Latvia in 1940).

  3. portal.ehri-project.eu › authorities › ehri_pers-000313EHRI - Prützmann Hans Adolf

    RFSS. I. Reichsführer-SS (RFSS)/ Feldkommandostelle: Varia, Januar 1940-April 1944, [EAP 161-b-12/358], unter anderem: 1) geheimes Fernschreiben, SS-Obergruppenführer Prützmann an RFSS vom 15. Juni 1943: Einsatz von Arbeitskräften der SS in der Ukraine (Speer, von dem Bach); Bl. 90965-0969, siehe auch Bl. 1185; 2) geheime Reichssache, Chef ...

  4. Media in category "Hans-Adolf Prützmann" The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total. Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R53525, Hans Prützmann.jpg 533 × 800; 57 KB. Телеграмма Прюцмана. 25.08.1943.jpg 1,264 × 926; 134 KB. Retriev ...

  5. 21. Sept. 2007 · Re: SS-Obergruppenführer Hans-Adolf Prützmann. by Ponury » 09 Aug 2012, 16:25. When I see you also pretend that they were ordinary officers of the Third Reich. No, they were murderers. For their crimes after the war were in large part to shorten the head, even more than one court found no justification for their actions.

  6. 9. Nov. 2009 · Re: Suicide of Hans Adolf Prützmann Post by Peter » 31 Aug 2012, 19:01 There will certainly have been reports written, probably now in files which have yet to be RELEASED to the public at the London National Archives or quite possibly filed in the appendix to the war diary of a rear echelon unit which was the parent unit of the officer in charge (also at National Archives).