Executing The Beautiful Spectre.

The Stutthof trials were a series of war crime tribunals held in Poland for the prosecution of former Stutthof concentration camp staff and officials.
The Stutthof concentration camp was the first German concentration camp outside German borders in WWII, located near the village of Stutthof, Free City of Danzig(now Gdánsk, Poland).
Stutthof was originally a civilian internment camp, but eventually expanded and became a vast network of forced-labor camps.
It turned into a regular concentration camp in early 1942.
A crematorium and gas chamber were added in 1943-44, to be used as a part of the final solution.
Over 60 000 prisoners of Stutthof and its subcamps died as a result of executions, disease, starvation, brutal treatment, forced labour ,and death marches after forced evacuations.
Soviet forces liberated Stutthof on May 9, 1945.
One of the more brutal guards sentenced to death was 24 year old Jenny Barkmann.
She did not hesitate while selecting women and children for execution, nor did she hesitate to beat inmates to death.
Because of the combination of her looks and her cruelty, inmates nicknamed her "The Beautiful Spectre".
She is said to have giggled through the trial, flirted with her prison guards and arranging her hair in court. Upon hearing her death sentence she declared, "Life is indeed a pleasure, and pleasures are usually short."
Jenny, closest to the camera, was publicly executed by short-drop hanging along with 10 other defendants on Biskupia Górka Hill, near Gdańsk. Continue reading
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