Max Troll (1902 – 7 April 1972) was a German communist-turned-
informer who betrayed hundreds of Bavarian communists to the
Bavarian Political Police, a forerunner of the
Gestapo, between 1933 and 1936. Troll spent a short time in
Dachau concentration camp
,
, commandant = List of commandants
, known for =
, location = Upper Bavaria, Southern Germany
, built by = Germany
, operated by = ''Schutzstaffel'' (SS)
, original use = Political prison
, construction ...
and served in the German Army during
World War II. After the war he was sentenced to ten years in jail for his role as informer and released after five, in contrast to his Gestapo handlers who were not prosecuted.
Troll was never a Nazi, opposing the regime instead, but a number of factors have been cited for his betrayal, among them financial difficulties, his treatment while being held at Dachau and the threat of physical violence against his stepbrothers should he not cooperate.
Biography
Early life
Troll, the son of a truck driver, and born in
Lower Bavaria, grew up in
Munich. Troll worked as a labourer on building sites and as a life guard for the city of Munich, but lost his job in 1931 because of his left-wing activities and thereafter remained unemployed until 1934. Troll lived in the working class suburb of
Giesing, in public housing, an area dominated by unemployment and communist activities, and joined the
Communist Party of Germany
The Communist Party of Germany (german: Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands, , KPD ) was a major political party in the Weimar Republic between 1918 and 1933, an underground resistance movement in Nazi Germany, and a minor party in West German ...
(KPD) in 1932.
Nazi era
With
Adolf Hitler's rise to power
Adolf Hitler's rise to power began in the newly established Weimar Republic in September 1919 when Hitler joined the '' Deutsche Arbeiterpartei'' (DAP; German Workers' Party). He rose to a place of prominence in the early years of the party. Be ...
in Germany, the Nazis took power in
Bavaria on 9 March 1933 and Troll was arrested the same day alongside his two stepbrothers and taken to
Dachau concentration camp
,
, commandant = List of commandants
, known for =
, location = Upper Bavaria, Southern Germany
, built by = Germany
, operated by = ''Schutzstaffel'' (SS)
, original use = Political prison
, construction ...
. He and his brothers were some of its first inmates. Troll was released in May and worked as an informer for the
Bavarian political police, now under the control of
Heinrich Himmler. The possibility exists that he either already worked as an informer when he joined the KPD in 1932,
or that he may have been forced into cooperating after his release by the threat that his brothers would be killed or ill-treated at Dachau should he refuse. His difficult financial situation as well as the fact that he was broken by ill treatment while at Dachau may also have been factors. In any case, from May 1933 Troll made a concentrated effort to establish the names of Bavarian communists who had gone underground. Because of the decentralized nature of the communist movements it had become very hard for the police to track the communist resistance.
Under the code name "Theo", Troll actively recruited members for the communist resistance. He was employed at a building site at the
Deutsches Museum in Munich in 1934 and successfully recruited members there. Those as well as communists who distributed illegal leaflets and collected donations for the ''
Rote Hilfe'', an organisation supporting family members of people arrested by the Nazis, were betrayed by Troll. He rose to become, in April 1935, the leader of the ''Rote Hilfe'' and, in early 1936, the leader of the KPD in Southern Bavaria. Troll travelled repeatedly to Switzerland and Czechoslovakia to obtain donations and instructions while also infiltrating the non-communist resistance in Bavaria with his informers.
Because of his work the Bavarian political police were able to wait until mid-1935 until initiating a wave of arrests,
being in almost complete control of the communist resistance in Munich and able to direct it through Troll. By then, when suspicion started to fall on him, Troll had handed the names of 250 communists and sympathisers to the police as well as betrayed their organisational structure, bringing the communist resistance in Munich to an almost complete standstill. Some of the resistance members he betrayed were subsequently sentenced to death and executed.
He was also involved in the destruction of the Munich cell of the
Socialist Workers' Party of Germany and made contact with Catholic and monarchist resistance groups as part of the aim of the KPD to create a united peoples front, the ''Volksfront'', to
resist Hitler and the Nazis.
Troll was withdrawn as an informer by the
Gestapo in 1936 and subsequently worked in the
Messerschmitt
Messerschmitt AG () was a German share-ownership limited, aircraft manufacturing corporation named after its chief designer Willy Messerschmitt from mid-July 1938 onwards, and known primarily for its World War II fighter aircraft, in partic ...
aircraft factory in
Regensburg
Regensburg or is a city in eastern Bavaria, at the confluence of the Danube, Naab and Regen rivers. It is capital of the Upper Palatinate subregion of the state in the south of Germany. With more than 150,000 inhabitants, Regensburg is the f ...
,
courtesy to a glowing referral provided by
Karl Brunner, the head of the Gestapo in Munich.
While paid well during his times as police informer for his work, receiving up to 240
Reichsmark per month, Troll did not receive any further benefits once his role had been completed and the Gestapo actively tried to ensure that he would not be employed in any politically sensitive role. From 1940 to 1944 Troll served in the
Wehrmacht until captured in 1944,
and returned to Germany in 1946 after having been a prisoner of war in France. During his time in the German military his comrades noted that Troll was opposed to the Nazi regime and criticised it, something they testified to in his trial after the war.
Post-war
He was tracked down by victims of his betrayal, who extracted a written confession from him, which led to his arrest in West Germany in May 1947. He was sentenced to ten years in a labour camp by a court in Regensburg, but released after five for health reasons. The sentence against Troll in Regensburg was one of the hardest for Nazi crimes there and also included confiscation of his assets, loss of the right to vote, and a ban from working.
Attempts to prosecute him further for the death of communists he betrayed were unsuccessful as the court in Munich deemed the result of his actions as within the frame of the anti-communist laws in Germany at the time and the
Cold War
The Cold War is a term commonly used to refer to a period of geopolitical tension between the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies, the Western Bloc and the Eastern Bloc. The term '' cold war'' is used because the ...
anti-communist attitude in the west after the war. His three former contacts in the Gestapo who he reported to were not prosecuted, although they did spend some compulsory time in detention for being members of the organisation. Some even re-entered Bavarian government service after the war.
Troll died in Regensburg on 7 April 1972 without suffering any further repercussions for his actions as informer.
The destruction of the communist resistance in Munich and the role Troll played in it became part of the novel ''Verrat in München und Burghausen'' (Betrayal in Munich and Burghausen) by Max Brym, published in 2018, which tells the story a fictional protagonist in the background of the real events.
References
Citations
Bibliography
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Troll, Max
1902 births
1972 deaths
Dachau concentration camp survivors
Gestapo informants
German communists
German Army personnel of World War II
German prisoners of war in World War II held by France
People from Munich
Nazis convicted of crimes