Resultado de búsqueda
When she was arrested on March 15, 1946, Gillars only asked to take with her a picture of Koischwitz. [9] She was then held by the Counterintelligence Corps at Camp King , Oberursel , along with collaborators Herbert John Burgman and Donald S. Day , until she was conditionally released from custody on December 24, 1946; however, she ...
20 de sept. de 2023 · On September 24, 1948, Mildred Gillars—the notorious American citizen known as “Axis Sally,” who had been living in Germany and broadcasting Nazi radio propaganda during World War II —pleads...
23 de nov. de 2009 · Mildred Gillars spent two and a half years in the Allied prison camp at Frankfurt-am-Main without charges before being returned to the United States in August 1948 to await trial. She was found guilty in March 1949 after a three-month trial and sentenced to 10 to 30 years imprisonment with a $10,000 fine.
Gillars was arrested in Berlin on March 15, 1946, and kept in Germany until August 1948, without being charged or given legal representation until flown home for indictment and trial. Her captors even allowed her leave outside detention for Christmas 1946.
13 de mar. de 2015 · After a six-week trial, a jury convicted Gillars of treason primarily because of her "Vision of Invasion" play. She was sentenced to 10-30 years in the Federal Women's Reformatory in West...
2 de jul. de 1988 · Arrest in 1946. When she was arrested in 1946, Miss Gillars said she had moved to Germany to marry a German citizen, who later died. The man was Max Otto Koischwitz, a former professor at...
Mildred Gillars, a German American who broadcast for Nazi Germany. [1] [2] She was "the first woman in US history to be convicted of treason " [3] by the United States and following her arrest in Berlin, "on 8 March 1949 was sentenced to ten to thirty years' imprisonment."