Friedrich Alpers


Friedrich Alpers was a German Nazi politician and SS-Obergruppenführer. He was also a Minister of the Free State of Brunswick, and Generalforstmeister. Alpers was responsible for numerous political crimes in Brunswick. Alpers committed suicide in 1944, while in US custody.

NSDAP and SS career

Born in 1901, Alpers studied law and political science at the Heidelberg University, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and University of Greifswald. He became a lawyer in 1929. In June 1929, Alpers joined the Nazi Party. In May 1930 he joined the Sturmabteilung. On 1 March 1931 he joined the SS. He was an active member in the SS, rising to the rank of Obergruppenführer. Since October 1930, he was Minister of the Brunswick State Parliament. Alpers was twice temporarily suspended from the SS in 1933 following complaints of excessive violence made against him during the Nazi takeover of Brunswick.

Minister of the Free State of Brunswick

After the Nazi seizure of power, Alpers became Finance and Justice Minister of Brunswick on 8 May 1933 under the Ministerpräsident Dietrich Klagges. Along with Klagges and Friedrich Jeckeln, Alpers was one of the main persons responsible for the Gleichschaltung and persecution of political opponents in the Free State of Brunswick.
Subordinated to Alpers was Klagges "Hilfspolizei". This force was directly answerable to Klagges and consisted of SA, SS and Der Stahlhelm men. On 4 July 1933, Alpers was directly involved in the Rieseberg Murders of eleven communists and labor organizers in Rieseberg, about east of Braunschweig.

Awards