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Okla-homey
8/8/2008, 06:06 AM
August 8, 1942: Nazi saboteurs executed in Washington

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66 years ago today during World War II, six Germans who secretly entered the United States on a mission to attack our civil infrastructure are executed by the United States for spying. Two other Germans who disclosed the plot to the FBI and aided U.S. authorities in their manhunt for their collaborators were imprisoned.

In 1942, under Nazi leader Adolf Hitler's orders, the defense branch of the German Military Intelligence Corps initiated a program to infiltrate the United States and destroy industrial plants, bridges, railroads, waterworks, and Jewish-owned businesses.

The Nazis hoped that sabotage teams would be able to slip into America at the rate of one or two every six weeks. The first two teams, made up of eight Germans who had all lived in the United States before the war, departed the German submarine base at Lorient, France, in late May.

Just before midnight on June 12, in a heavy fog, a German submarine reached the American coast off Amagansett, Long Island, and deployed a team who rowed ashore in an inflatable boat. Just as the Germans finished burying their explosives in the sand, John C. Cullen, a young U.S. Coast Guardsman, came upon them during his regular patrol of the beach.

http://img240.imageshack.us/img240/7923/dascullenju8.jpg
Seaman Second Class (E-3) John C. Cullen, USCG.

The leader of the team, George Dasch, bribed the suspicious Cullen, and he accepted the money, promising to keep quiet. However, as soon as he passed safely back into the fog, he sprinted the two miles back to the Coast Guard station and informed his superiors of his discovery.

After retrieving the German supplies from the beach, the Coast Guard called the FBI, which launched a massive manhunt for the saboteurs, who had fled to New York City.

Although unaware that the FBI was looking for them, Dasch and another saboteur, Ernest Burger, decided to turn themselves in and betray their colleagues, perhaps because they feared capture was inevitable after the botched landing.

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Dasch (top) and Burger

On July 15, Dasch called the FBI in New York, but they failed to take his claims seriously, so he decided to travel to FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C. On July 18, the same day that a second four-man team successfully landed at Ponte Verdra Beach, Florida, Dasch turned himself in at FBI headquarters in DC. This time, they beleived him because on meeting with the agent assigned to investigate his claim, Dasch dumped $84,000 in US currency all over the agent's desk (supplied by the Nazi government to finance the saboteurs dirty deeds in the US) and agreed to help the FBI capture the rest of his countrymen.

Burger and the rest of the Long Island team were picked up by June 22, and by June 27 the whole of the Florida team was arrested. To preserve wartime secrecy, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered a special military tribunal consisting of seven generals to try the German prosoners.

At the end of July, Dasch was sentenced to 30 years in prison, Burger was sentenced to hard labor for life, and the other six Germans were sentenced to die. Their names: Edward John Kerling, Heinrich Harm Heinck, Richard Quirin, Werner Thiel, Hermann Otto Neubauer, and Herbert Hans Haupt. About a week after sentencing, the six condemned Germans were executed in the electric chair in Washington, D.C., on this day in 1942.

In 1944, two other German spies were caught after a landing in Maine. No other instances of German sabotage within wartime America has come to light.

In 1948, Dasch and Burger were freed by order of President Harry Truman, and they both returned to Germany. They were both ostracized back home when German newspapers reported their traitorous wartime story. The German people felt Dasch and Burger were personally responsible for the capture and death of six of their fellow German soldiers. They both died embittered old men in the 1990's.

olevetonahill
8/8/2008, 06:22 AM
Thats good stuff Homey

MrJimBeam
8/8/2008, 07:18 AM
Did either of these guys drive for Hitler?

The military tribunals we put on these days are weak compared to this.

bonkuba
8/8/2008, 07:52 AM
Did either of these guys drive for Hitler?

The military tribunals we put on these days are weak compared to this.

If they did drive they would have only gotten 6 months today. :mad:

Well, actually 5 1/2 years but ya know who's counting. For being caught with a surface to air in his car and being around when 9/11 was planned.......yeah.......5 1/2 years seems about right for all the lost lives, etc :mad:

But on to better things.....it's FRIDAY!!!!!:D

OUDoc
8/8/2008, 08:08 AM
"Hard labor". We don't sentence anyone to that anymore. It's a shame.

TUSooner
8/8/2008, 02:17 PM
I thought I read that they were hanged in a gallows rigged in an elevator shaft. Just sayin...

royalfan5
8/8/2008, 02:23 PM
I thought I read that they were hanged in a gallows rigged in an elevator shaft. Just sayin...

Did the hangman stand in the elevator and hit the down button?

TUSooner
8/8/2008, 02:42 PM
Did the hangman stand in the elevator and hit the down button?

That's good. :rolleyes:

:D

But let's digress. When I was in rural southwest Denmark a coupla weeks ago, I saw lots of ripe grain fields. I had some questions which I knew at the time could be answered by royalfan5. So here they is:

1. Why would a farmer cut down ripe grain with a combine but leave it all on the ground (that is, there was no truck alongside and no threshed grain coming out of the big spouit on the harvester)? Could it be the guy was just testing the cutting machinery in a small area? Could he have been cutting some kind of grain for feed that would be bailed up with straw, kernels and all?

2. At one field, I plucked a few stalks and ate the grain (using the biblically appropved rub your hands together and blow method). The grain was fat, moist, tender and nutty and actually pretty good. At another field, I did the same thing, but the grains were longer and skinnier and tooth-breaking hard. What king of grains do you think I was eating? I'm guessing the first field was rye or barley.

Okla-homey
8/8/2008, 02:45 PM
I thought I read that they were hanged in a gallows rigged in an elevator shaft. Just sayin...

Different group of Nazis. The ones you are thinking of were the dozen or so hard-core Nazi PW's who were convicted at court-martial for murdering not-so-hard-core fellow German prisoners in US PW camps. They are buried at Ft. Leavenworth.

royalfan5
8/8/2008, 02:48 PM
That's good. :rolleyes:

:D

But let's digress. When I was in rural southwest Denmark a coupla weeks ago, I saw lots of ripe grain fields. I had some questions which I knew at the time could be answered by royalfan5. So here they is:

1. Why would a farmer cut down ripe grain with a combine but leave it all on the ground (that is, there was no truck alongside and no threshed grain coming out of the big spouit on the harvester)? Could it be the guy was just testing the cutting machinery in a small area? Could he have been cutting some kind of grain for feed that would be bailed up with straw, kernels and all?

2. At one field, I plucked a few stalks and ate the grain (using the biblically appropved rub your hands together and blow method). The grain was fat, moist, tender and nutty and actually pretty good. At another field, I did the same thing, but the grains were longer and skinnier and tooth-breaking hard. What king of grains do you think I was eating? I'm guessing the first field was rye or barley.

In more northern climates small grains (wheat, rye, barley, etc) will be windrowed to to accelerate the curing process. Then picked up and threshed later. Or it could be chopped for fodder. Without seeing the field it is hard for me to say for certain. I would guess you are right on the first part of the second part, and the second field was a hard wheat variety.

TUSooner
8/8/2008, 02:59 PM
In more northern climates small grains (wheat, rye, barley, etc) will be windrowed to to accelerate the curing process. Then picked up and threshed later. Or it could be chopped for fodder. Without seeing the field it is hard for me to say for certain. I would guess you are right on the first part of the second part, and the second field was a hard wheat variety.

See, I knew who to ask!

TUSooner
8/8/2008, 03:11 PM
Different group of Nazis. The ones you are thinking of were the dozen or so hard-core Nazi PW's who were convicted at court-martial for murdering not-so-hard-core fellow German prisoners in US PW camps. They are buried at Ft. Leavenworth.

Ah so.

soonersn20xx
8/8/2008, 03:13 PM
Very interesting, this would be somewhat related:

'Great Escape' veteran Eric Dowling dies at 92........
With the passage of time, we have less and less of these brave men who fought in the greatest conflict of mankind.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080807/...cape_veteran_3