About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 47. Chapters: German assassins, German female murderers, German murderers of children, German people convicted of murder, German serial killers, Fritz Haarmann, Hermine Braunsteiner, Magda Goebbels, Bruno Hauptmann, Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski, Ernst August Wagner, Armin Meiwes, Karl Ludwig Sand, Paul Ogorzow, Brigitte Mohnhaupt, Wolfgang Werle and Manfred Lauber, Peter Kurten, Assia Wevill, Johann Otto Hoch, Peter Stumpp, Eugen Weidmann, Christine Schurrer, Joachim Kroll, Oswald Kaduk, Ernst Werner Techow, Anton Graf von Arco auf Valley, Anna Marie Hahn, Josef Schwammberger, Franz Muller, Jurgen Bartsch, Karl Fritzsch, Frederick of Isenberg, Hans B. Schmidt, Sophie Charlotte Elisabeth Ursinus, Sieglinde Hofmann, Jens Soering, Christian Klar, Rolf Clemens Wagner, Adelheid Schulz, Karl Grossmann, Wolfgang Abel and Mario Furlan, Elisabeth Wiese, Joseph Schwab, Bruno Ludke, Magnus Gafgen, Norbert Poehlke, Angelika Speitel, Hermann Souchon, Gesche Gottfried, Karl Denke, Max Hodel, Margarete Rabe, Volker Eckert, Fritz Honka, Ernst Weiner, Anna Maria Zwanziger, Marianne Nolle, Frank Schmokel, Stephan Letter, Friedrich Staps, Karl Nobiling, Ernst Krankemann, Richard Muller, Sabine Hilschenz. Excerpt: Hermine Braunsteiner Ryan (July 16, 1919 - April 19, 1999) was a female camp guard and the first Nazi war criminal to be extradited from the United States. She was born in Vienna, the youngest child in a strictly observant Roman Catholic working class family. Her father Friedrich Braunsteiner was a chauffeur for a brewery and/or a butcher. Hermine lacked the means to fulfill her aspiration to become a nurse, and worked as a maid. From 1937 to 1938 she worked in England for an American engineer's household. In 1938 the Anschluss made her a German citizen, and she returned to Vienna. Late that year she moved and found work at the Heinkel aircr..