Hans Clemens

Johannes Max Clemens (February 9, 1902 — 1976) was a German functionary of respectively the SS, Sicherheitsdienst (SD, Security Service) was primarily the intelligence service of the SS and the Nazi Party in Nazi Germany. Clemens was also known as the Tiger of Como while serving as a captain in the SS.[1] Perhaps he is the same that Victor Klemperer defines as "animal" in his diaries and that answered to a victim of his brutality who asked him "why do you hate me so much?", "Simply because you are a jew". Then he participated to the Gehlen Organization and Bundesnachrichtendienst (Bundesnachrichtendienst (Federal Intelligence Service, BND) is the foreign intelligence agency of the modern German government, under the control of the Chancellor's Office), and finally he made his job for the KGB (the KGB was the national security agency of the USSR).[2]

Clemens was part of a group of Soviet spies that were put on trial in 1963. His co-defendants were Heinz Felfe and Erwin Tiebel.[3] Clemens received a 10-years sentence for treason.[4]

Notes

  1. Intelligence Agency's Murky Past: The Nazi Criminals Who Became German Spooks
  2. "Testimonial statements by Erwin Tiebel" (PDF). CIA documents declassified 2005. Freedom of Information Act Electronic Reading Room, Central Intelligence Agency, Langley, VA. 14 December 1961. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  3. "Trial of 3 as Soviet Spies Opens in West Germany". The New York Times. July 9, 1963.
  4. "Bonn Double Agents Betrayed 95 to Reds". The New York Times. July 24, 1963.
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