During a military trial in late 1945, Soviet investigators found eleven captured Nazis guilty of killing civilians in the Pskov and Leningrad Regions.

In 1944, on the eve of the Nazi retreat from Russia, German soldiers intensified their activities and tried to drag as many Soviet citizens as possible with them. Those who disobeyed or tried to hide were killed – most often burnt alive.

The highest-ranking person on the list of the accused was Major General Heinrich Remlinger, commandant of the city of Pskov. Under his orders, 25,000 people were forcibly transferred to Germany and 145 villages burned to the ground. At least 700 civilians were burned alive, shot, or tortured to death by his subordinates.

Natalya Filippova, an eyewitness from the village of Zamushki, said:

“My daughter was eight years old, and I asked her why she didn't come to me sooner? She said she was afraid: ‘If I moved they would have killed me, so I was lying in the straw with everyone else.’ Twenty four of our men were killed. Zakharov’s face was stabbed with knives, his head flattened…Misha Petukhov, who was just a one-year-old baby, was crushed underfoot.”

Defendant Eduard Sonnenfeld, commander of the Police Battalion 322 death squad
Defendant Eduard Sonnenfeld, commander of the Police Battalion 322 death squad
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Defendant Eduard Sonnenfeld, commander of the Police Battalion 322 death squad, was identified by survivors. His soldiers killed over 50 civilians. He admitted to having personally killed eight people.

The defendants' accounts were corroborated by the surviving Soviet citizens and defendants themselves.

The verdicts were handed down on 4 January 1946. Remlinger, Sonnenfeld, and seven others were sentenced to death by hanging, the others – to hard labour.

Source:

Web portal History.RF