Nazis ‘killed hundreds of unfit children at clinic’
The documents, transcripts from Russian interrogation of a doctor in charge of the clinic, "contain descriptions of mass killings", historian Florian Beierl said.
More than 700 children deemed by the Nazis to be physically, mentally or otherwise unfit to live, were killed in the Am Spiegelgrund clinic, and thousands were exposed to cruel experiments.
In the documents, the clinic's first director, Dr Erwin Jekelius, describes how six to 10 children a month were killed at the hospital, and how his doctors made up fake diagnoses as causes of death to give to the children's parents, Mr Beierl said.
Dr Jekelius also says staff member Dr Heinrich Gross was an expert in killing children, and that he used poison to kill them, Mr Beierl said. Dr Jekelius died in a Soviet prison in 1952 while serving a 25-year sentence for killing 4,000 civilians under the broader Nazi programme that included Am Spiegelgrund.
It was unclear whether the new findings would have any legal significance.
Gross the only surviving Am Spiegelgrund official has been put on trial three times, but two were dismissed, the first on legal technicalities, and the second because a statute of limitations on manslaughter had expired.
A third trial in 2000, in which Gross was accused of complicity in the deaths of nine handicapped children from abuse, was suspended after a psychiatrist testified he was unfit for trial because of advanced dementia.
A spokesman for the prosecutor's office Ernst Kloyber, said experts would study the documents handed in today by Beierl to see if they contained new evidence.
"But because Gross is not able to stand trial, it won't change anything in practice," he said.
The documents, nonetheless, shed more light on what happened at Am Spiegelgrund, said journalist Thomas Staehler, who along with Beierl found the transcripts while researching a television documentary.
"In any case, it is very important that what happened here is clarified and explored," Mr Staehler said in an interview after a news conference to announce the new findings.





