Hans Jüttner


Hans Jüttner was a German high-ranking functionary in the SS of Nazi Germany who served as the head of the SS Führungshauptamt.

Career in the Nazi Party and the SS

In 1933 Jüttner joined the SA. In 1934, Jüttner became chef of the SA Reichsführerschule in Munich. In May 1935, he switched to the SS combat support force, which subsequently became the Waffen-SS. By 1939, Jüttner had become the Inspector of Reserve Troops of the SS-VT-Division. From early 1940, Jüttner led the SS-VT command office.
In the summer of the same year, Jüttner was promoted to chief of staff of the newly created SS Leadership Main Office, which was responsible for the Waffen-SS's organizational and administrative leadership. This was separate from the administration of Nazi concentration camps, the SS Economic and Administrative Main Office, and from the Reich Main Security Office, which administered the Gestapo, Kripo and SD. Shortly after taking office, Jüttner was instrumental in wresting control of the militarized Death's Head regiments from Concentration Camps Inspectorate chief Theodor Eicke and amalgamating them into the Waffen-SS. In June 1943, he was promoted to SS-Obergruppenführer. On 30 January 1943, Jüttner became chief of the SS Leadership Main Office. Heinrich Himmler appointed Jüttner Chief of "Army Armament and Commander of the Reserve Army".

Trial and conviction

On 17 May 1945, Jüttner was taken prisoner by British forces. In 1948 he was sentenced to 10 years in a labour camp. In appeal proceedings in 1949 the punishment was lowered to 4 years. In 1961 Jüttner testified for the prosecution in the trial of Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann. Later Jüttner was the proprietor of a sanatorium in Bad Tölz, where he died in 1965.