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Nazi camp secretary convicted of helping with mass murder at the age of 99

A 99-year-old former secretary at Stottf concentration camp was found guilty of mass murder of more than 10,000 people between June 1943 and April 1945, prosecutors said Monday.

A spokesman said the woman died on January 14 under German privacy law.

Her case has attracted widespread media attention in Germany because it is believed to be the last criminal trial to resolve a mass murder in Nazis. This is also the first time that he has been convicted of a crime committed in the camp.

Last August, the German Federal Court rejected her appeal against a December 2022 ruling in the Itzehoe District Court in northern Hamburg.

The district court was sentenced to two years in prison for assisting and chasing murders in 10,505 cases and murdering murders in five cases.

The woman was sentenced to youth sentence when she was under 21 at the time of the crime.

Irmgard F was hired in the commander’s office near the commander’s office in the Nazi concentration camp, at the time the free city of Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland), when she was 18-19 years old.

The district court ruled that through her work, the young woman assisted the camp officials in the system to kill prisoners. Likewise, legally, auxiliary activities can be considered as a murder case that contributes to and teaches.

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