Ruth Brown (Linda’s fictional character) here reporting on the
doomed German spy mission Operation Pastorius. Staged in 1942 and named for the
leader of the first German settlement in America, the objective was to sabotage
the economic infrastructure of the United States.
Eight men were involved, two of whom were American citizens.
On June 13th, four of the agents landed on the beach in Long Island
from a submarine. They wore German uniforms so that if captured, they would be
treated as POWs rather than spies. Carrying explosives their aim was to attack
a number of locations such as the hydrroelectric plants at Niagara Falls,
several of ALCOA’s manufacturing plants, locks on the Ohio River, and the
Pennsylvania Railroad’s repair shops at Altoona. They were also to blow up
bridges, railroad stations, water facilities and other public locations. On
June 17th, the additional agents landed in Ponta Verde Beach,
Florida.
By June 27th, all eight men were in custody
without having performed on act of sabotage.
So, what happened? As it turned out, the mission didn’t have
much chance of success to begin with. One of the men got drunk in Paris and
announced to the plan to everyone in the bar. Another left documents relating
to the mission on a train. And yet another of the men, George Dasch, was found
by the Coast Guard almost immediately upon landing in New York, but he managed
to elude capture.
Realizing that failure was imminent, Dasch decided to turn
himself in and betray the others. The agents were picked up within a days and
tried before a military tribunal shortly thereafter.
The verdict?
All were found guilty, six of whom received the death
penalty. Of the other two men, Ernst Burger received life imprisonment and
Dasch thirty years. In April 1948, President Truman granted executive clemency
to the two men on condition of deportation. They were transported to the
American Zone of Germany, the unexecuted portions of the sentences were suspended
upon such conditions with respect to travel, employment, political, and other
activities as the Theatre commander might require, and they were freed.
Resettled in Germany,
Dasch died in 1988 at the age of 92, and Burger in 1975.
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