3 Jan. 46
taken from the Criminal Police and the majority of the
leading men in the State Police offices, that is, in the regional
offices of the State Police, had risen from the ranks of the civil
administration, possibly also from the Police administrations of the
various Länder (Länderpolizeiverwaltungen), and that they had,
in part, even been detailed from the civil administration. The same was
also true for the experts within Amt IV the Gestapo.
DR. MERKEL: You say the majority Of the officials were detailed?
OHLENDORF: I did not say the majority were detailed, but I said "in
part."
DR. MERKEL: Detailed in part? Was it possible for any of these members
of the Gestapo to resist being taken over into the Gestapo if they did
not wish it, or was it not?
OHLENDORF: I would not affirm that a definite resistance was possible.
Some of them might have succeeded, by cunning, in avoiding it had they
not wanted to go. But if one was detailed to such an office from the
civil administration, then, as an official, one simply had to obey. As
an official one had to.
DR. MERKEL: The members of the Gestapo evidently consisted almost
exclusively, or exclusively, of civil service officials? Do you know
anything about that?
OHLENDORF: That probably was no longer the case during the war. But as a
rule it should be assumed that they were officials insofar as the
specialists were concerned. Some of them, of course, while in training,
were not yet officials and others again were engaged merely as employees
or, especially, as assistants.
DR. MERKEL: Can you tell me the approximate number of the members of the
Gestapo towards the end of the war?
OHLENDORF: I estimate the total organization of the Gestapo, including
the regional offices and the occupied territories, at about 30,000.
DR. MERKEL: There was therefore within the Gestapo a considerable
percentage of officials who were merely administrative officials and had
nothing to do with operational functions?
OHLENDORF: Yes, of course.
DR. MERKEL: And what was the percentage of these administrative
officials who performed purely administrative functions?
OHLENDORF: We must, in the first instance, take into consideration that
this number included the assistants, as well as the women; and I cannot
give you any figures off hand. But it is certain that a proportion of
one specialist to three or four persons not employed in a functional
capacity could not be considered excessive.