Diskussion:Hermann Josef Abs
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Der sonderbare Fall Hermann Abs
[Quelltext bearbeiten]You may be interested to see a readers letter that appeared in October 1998: "Der sonderbare Fall Hermann Abs. See: http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_5BdcFWbkqxE/SMZv1lksioI/AAAAAAAAAQU/LBx5Ih9fs0w/s1600-h/FallAbsMB98.jpg
- And what do we make out of this for the purposes of this article? SchnitteUK (Diskussion) 11:33, 26. Feb. 2016 (CET)
Verurteilung?
[Quelltext bearbeiten]In Dark Towers, Kapitel 1, schreibt der Journalist David Enrich (Hervorhebung meine):
After Germany surrendered in 1945, Berlin was divvied up among the Allied powers. The ruins of the bank’s headquarters happened to fall in the British quadrant. That proved fortuitous. Germany still owed England reparations from World War I. If the British had any hope of recouping that money, a strong German bank would be necessary to bring the country’s economy back from the dead. Hermann Abs had fled Berlin in the back of a delivery truck on the eve of the Allied invasion, and he was now wanted as a war criminal. When he was later tried in absentia and sentenced to a decade of hard labor, the British came to his aid; Abs ended up working the fields at an upscale prison camp for a few months and then was released.
Können wir hierfür weitere Belege finden und das in den Artikel einarbeiten? -- Yihkrys (Diskussion) 17:30, 13. Mai 2020 (CEST)
OMGUS-Berichte
[Quelltext bearbeiten]Welche Folgen hätte denn die Veröffentlichung der Berichte gehabt? Wäre Czichon freigesprochen worden? --Nuuk 19:39, 14. Jan. 2024 (CET)