Butcher of Breslau: Sadistic SA Commander Edmund Heines
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Edmund Heines was one of the most violent and feared figures in the Nazi Party’s early years. A decorated war veteran turned fanatic, he joined Hitler’s paramilitary wing, the SA, and quickly built a reputation for brutality. As police chief of Breslau, he oversaw arrests, torture, and murders of political opponents. Prisoners in his private camp at Dürrgoy were beaten, humiliated, and sometimes killed under his orders.
Long before his rise, Heines had already been convicted of a political killing — the Fememord of Willi Schmidt — revealing his willingness to execute those he viewed as “traitors.” His sadism and unchecked power made him a symbol of the SA’s lawless terror that spread across Germany in 1933.
But the same violence that helped Hitler seize control would turn against him. During the Night of the Long Knives in 1934, Hitler purged the SA leadership. Heines, caught in a compromising position, was executed by the SS — ending the life of one of Nazi Germany’s most ruthless early enforcers.
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