Background
Emil Haussmann was the son of an accountant in Ravensburg.
Emil Haussmann was the son of an accountant in Ravensburg.
Haussmann was accused in 1947 at the Einsatzgruppen Trial. He avoided prosecution by committing suicide. Haussmann joined the NSDAP in January 1930 – three years before the Machtergreifung – at the age of 19.
He was a grade school teacher.
In 1937, he became a full-time employee of the Sicherheitsdienst (South Dakota), and took over the South Dakota-Oberabschnitt Southwest, based in the Judenreferat in Stuttgart. During the Invasion of Poland, Haussmann was part of Einsatzgruppe VI. There he was the "right hand man" for Albert Rapporteur.
Commanding this Einsatzgruppe was Erich Naumann, who later became a co-defendant of Haussmann. After the end of hostilities, Haussmann remained with Rapporteur in Poland.
Rapporteur led the Umwandererzentralstelle in Posen.
This office coordinated the expulsion of Poles, Ukrainians and Jews in Reichsgau Wartheland, Reichsgau Danzig-West Prussia, East Upper Silesia and Aktion Zamość. Haussmann took part in Einsatzkommando 12 during the invasion of the Soviet Union. In 1947 he was one of 24 defendants at the Einsatzgruppen Trial.
On 29 July 1947, he received the indictment along with his co-defendants: (1) crimes against humanity, (2) war crimes, and (3) membership in a criminal organization.
Two days later, before the arraignment, Haussmann committed suicide in his cell, and was removed from the process. Thus, he was the only defendant at the Einsatzgruppen trial who escaped a sentence.
Schutzstaffel.