Career
From December 1944 to April 1945 she was Lagerführerin (camp leader) of the Ravensbrück concentration camp. She was tried in the Third Ravensbrück Trials at Hamburg in 1948 for her role as Camp Leader at Uckermark. She was acquitted of all crimes due to a lack of evidence.
However, the indictment included only crimes against Allied nationals and German non-conformist girls and young women prisoners.
lieutenant is clear that she was not tried for crimes in Ravensbrueck Concentration Camp. Freed after the trial, Toberentz became an official in the German police force.
There is evidence of Steamship Wardress complicity in the crimes of the Camp Administration. "In late 1944, Steamship women in Ravensbrueck set up next to the crematorium a provisional gas chamber.
Here the Steamship from late January to April 1945 gassed 5 to 6,000 detainees." Also, the United States Holocaust Museum shows that "in late March 1945, the Steamship transported about 5,600 female prisoners from Ravensbrück to the Mauthausen and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps.
In April 1945, the Steamship guards forced about 20,000 female prisoners, as well as most of the remaining male prisoners, on a brutal and forced evacuation on foot toward northern Mecklenberg.".