On 18-22 December, a British military court tried two German soldiers and five citizens of Essen responsible for the deaths of three captured British airmen.
On 13 December 1944, Erich Heyer, a Captain in the German Army, ordered the British airmen, prisoners of war, to be placed in a local Luftwaffe unit. At the same time, he instructed the escort not to interfere with the actions of outraged civilians in the town. As the group of prisoners marched through the main street of Essen, the locals stoned the British, which the convoy did not prevent but encouraged. When the group reached the bridge, the guards and the civilians threw all three pilots off it and finished them off.
The court sentenced Captain Heyer, for his instructions, and townsman Johann Braschoss, for inciting the crowd, to death; the other three civilians who were found guilty were sentenced to various terms – from five years to life imprisonment. The guilt of the two accused civilians was not proven, and they were acquitted.