On 28 January 1946, former Dachau Concentration Camp Commandant Hans Loritz, a fugitive from justice, was detected in the Gadeland Civil Internment Camp. In April 1945, Loritz, using false documents, attempted to escape to Sweden. Instead, at the request of the British military government, he was interned and transferred to Germany.
SS-Oberführer (Senior Colonel) Hans Loritz was known as the commandant of several German concentration camps: Esterwegen, Dachau, and Sachsenhausen. His career peaked in 1940-1942 when he was the commandant of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. It was there that Loritz invented a new method of mass murder against Soviet prisoners of war, known as the “neck shot”: prisoners were invited one by one into a special room under the pretext of a medical examination and killed through a hole in the wall, most often disguised as a height metre or medical device. The shots were muffled by music, and the entire process lasted no more than 1-2 minutes.
Over the course of 1941, well over 10,000 Soviet prisoners of war were murdered in this way at the Sachsenhausen camp under Loritz's direction. The commandant himself took part in the selection of “dysfunctional” prisoners.
On 31 January 1946, Hans Loritz would commit suicide.
Sources:
The newspaper “Pravda”, No. 24 (10106) from 28 January 1946
A ‘Political Soldier’ and ‘Practitioner of Violence’: The Concentration Camp Commandant Hans Loritz, Dirk Riedel, Journal of Contemporary History