Klaus Sorgenicht (24 August 1923 – 22 October 1999) was a German politician and party functionary of the Socialist Unity Party (SED).
Sorgenicht served as the longtime head of the powerful State and Legal Affairs Department at the Central Committee of the SED and was notorious for the ruthlessness with which he pursued opponents of the political system of the GDR.
Early life
Sorgenicht attended elementary school and commercial school in Hagen and Wuppertal and completed a commercial apprenticeship from 1938 to 1941. Until 1942 he was a commercial employee and department head at the company he had trained at in Wuppertal-Elberfeld.[1]
He returned to Germany in February 1945, moving with the Soviet troops.[2] He became a member of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in July 1945 and was appointed deputy mayor of Güstrow under Hans Warnke on 6 May, rising to mayor two days later. After the local elections in 1946, Sorgenicht served as district administrator of the Güstrow district from October 1946 to the end of 1949.[1][2] In 1965, he was made an honorary citizen of Güstrow.[3]
In January 1950, probably at the instigation of Warnke, now Interior Minister of Mecklenburg he was appointed head of the state, district and municipal administration in the Interior Ministry of Mecklenburg.[2] After Warnke moved to the federal GDR Interior Ministry as State Secretary, Sorgenicht also left the Mecklenburg Interior Ministry in October 1951 to work as a main department head in the GDR Interior Ministry. In October 1952 Sorgenicht was the head of the main department for the coordination and control office for the work of the local organs of state power.[1][2]
SED Central Committee
Sorgenicht speaking at a session of the State Council in February 1970
This was one of the most influential departments of the Central Committee apparatus: not only was it responsible for Politburo decisions that concerned questions of the state, law, and the structure and functioning of state and judicial organs, and to control preparations and their implementation, it also headed its parallel departments in the Bezirk SED leaderships, significant parts of the Ministry of the Interior, the State Planning Commission, the Ministry of Justice, the Supreme Public Prosecutor's Office and the Supreme Court. Sorgenicht was thus significantly involved in all interventions in the judiciary and in the decisions of the Politburo that governed the judiciary.[2][4]
He was responsible, in cooperation with the Stasi, for the systematic surveillance of judges and prosecutors. Together with Karl Polak, he initiated the fight against the remaining "revisionists" in the judiciary of the GDR in early 1958, namely those jurists who adhered to bourgeois or social democratic positions. This campaign culminated in the Babelsberg Conference in April of the same year.[7] He never abandoned his mistrust of professional jurists, whose arguments differed drastically from the "ideologically crude statements of the bureaucrat Sorgenicht."
From 1955 to 1959, Sorgenicht completed a distance learning course at the Academy for Political Science and Law of the GDR in Potsdam, de facto a Marxist-Leninist cadre factory of the SED,[8] which he graduated with a degree in political science. In 1968, he received a doctorate (Dr. rer. pol.).[1][2]
In his capacity as department head, he was primarily responsible for the preparation and execution of trials against political opponents,[9] including some show trials ("trials in extended public").
Prior to many trials in the 1950s and early 1960s, Klaus Sorgenicht proposed to the Politburo to impose death sentences. Once approved by the Politburo, Sorgenicht's proposals became binding for the courts, as in the trials against Gerhard Benkowitz, Heinz-Georg Ebeling and Paul Köppe, Sylvester Murau, Gottfried Strympe, Werner Flach, Karl Laurenz, and Elli Barczatis. After the death sentences were handed down against Karl Laurenz and Elli Barczatis, he recommended PresidentWilhelm Pieck to reject their pardon request.[10]
In the RIAS trials, Sorgenicht proposed a life sentence for Joachim Wiebach. In this case, Ulbricht went beyond Sorgenicht's proposal and ordered the death penalty.[6][11]
In December 1961, Sorgenicht proposed imposing the death penalty on a farmer who had resisted the forced completion of collectivization in the spring of 1960. The party held him and another farmer, who was also sentenced to death and executed, responsible for more than half of the farmers in their village who had declared their withdrawal from the Agricultural Production Cooperative in July 1961.[12]
On 22 and 23 October 1989, together with Stasi head Erich Mielke, Security Affairs department head Wolfgang Herger, and Interior Minister Friedrich Dickel, he drafted a submission for the Politburo on "Measures to prevent further formation and to push back anti-socialist movements," one of the last attempts by the "old guard" within the SED to end the demonstrations for freedom "by all means." This submission is preserved in several drafts, the tone of which becomes increasingly harsh. However, the SED Politburo returned the submission to the authors for further revision.[14]
↑Fricke, Karl Wilhelm; Engelmann, Roger (1998). Konzentrierte Schläge: Staatssicherheitsaktionen und politische Prozesse in der DDR 1953-1956. Analysen und Dokumente (in German). Berlin: Ch. Links. p.194. ISBN978-3-86153-147-0.
↑Wendel, Eberhard (1996). Ulbricht als Richter und Henker - stalinistische Justiz im Parteiauftrag: Zeugnisse deutscher Geschichte (in German). Berlin: Aufbau-Verl. p.105. ISBN978-3-351-02452-9.
↑Vollnhals, Clemens; Engelmann, Roger (1999). Justiz im Dienste der Parteiherrschaft. Rechtspraxis und Staatssicherheit in der DDR (in German). Berlin: Ch. Links. p.194.
↑Bästlein, Klaus (2010). Schöne, Jens (ed.). Revolution: die DDR im Jahr 1989. Schriftenreihe des Berliner Landesbeauftragten für die Unterlagen des Staatssicherheitsdienstes der Ehemaligen DDR (in German) (3., unveränd. Aufled.). Berlin: Berliner Beauftragter zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur. p.26. ISBN978-3-934085-33-6.
↑Süß, Walter (1998). Staatssicherheit am Ende: warum es den Mächtigen nicht gelang, 1989 eine Revolution zu verhindern. Analysen und Dokumente (in German). Berlin: Ch. Links. p.364. ISBN978-3-86153-181-4.
↑Bästlein, Klaus; Mielke, Erich (2002). Der Fall Mielke: die Ermittlungen gegen den Minister für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Schriftenreihe Recht und Justiz der DDR (in German) (1. Aufled.). Baden-Baden: Nomos Publishing House. p.187. ISBN978-3-7890-7775-3.