Czesław Gęborski

Czesław Gęborski also Gemborski ( born June 5, 1925 in Dąbrowa Górnicza; † 14 June 2006), was the commander of the Polish internment Lamsdorf after 1945.

Counter Gęborski a method was already 1958 in Poland was opened for the murder of at least 71 people, including several children, but it was then an acquittal because of " inexperience ", obviously on political pressure from the government in Warsaw towards.

In 1968, after the release of the publication of Hell Lamsdorf the camp doctor Heinz Esser, who was imprisoned there myself, it came to investigations by the public prosecutor against Hagen Gęborski and seven Polish members of the former guards. 1977 has been indicted, the proceeding, however, since extradition of the accused from Poland to Germany did not take place, but also from political considerations on the politics of the social-liberal government in Bonn, the order relations with the communist-ruled Poland did not want to burden.

1989, after the end of communist rule and the political upheaval in Poland, indicated Oberschlesier Polish citizenship, who had been detained in Lamsdorf, Gęborski, who was now retired intelligence officials.

The twenty-year time of the crime sergeant of militia achtundvierzigfacher murder of camp inmates was accused in 2000 in a proceeding in Opole ( Opole). The legal representatives of ex- prisoners of the camp Lamsdorf accused the Polish judicial authorities to delay the process in order to avoid a verdict. In fact Gęborski died before the trial end. On 10 September 1999 appeared in the Tagesspiegel an article about the start of the process.

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