Erwin Schulz

Erwin Schulz (27 November 1900 in Berlin – 11 November 1981) was a German Nazi SS-Brigadeführer. He was the leader of Einsatzkommando 5 in Einsatzgruppe C under the command of Otto Rasch.

Career
Schulz received his doctorate in law in Berlin. He joined the Freikorps and worked in a bank in 1922. He joined the Schutzpolizei in Bremen and was appointed a police lieutenant in 1926. In 1931 he was an informant for the SS. He officially joined the Nazi Party in May 1933 and in November was appointed head of the Gestapo of Bremen. In 1935 he joined the SS and SD. In March 1938 he was promoted to SS-Sturmbannführer and Councillor of State in the state of Bremen. In April 1940 he was inspector-instructor of cadets of the SiPo and SD at Charlottenburg.

Schulz was appointed chief of Einsatzkommando 5 in May 1941. He directed the execution of thousands of Jews in Lvov, Zhytomyr, Dubno and Berdychiv between June and late August 1941. When he convened with Otto Rasch at Zhytomyr in mid August 1941, Rasch informed him that on the orders of Adolf Hitler, more Jews needed to be shot. Friedrich Jeckeln ordered that all Jews not engaged in forced labor, including women and children, were to be slaughtered. Schulz summarized the meeting:

Shortly thereafter he questioned both Bruno Streckenbach and Reinhard Heydrich on this point; it was confirmed that this order had come from Hitler. Schulz asked to be relieved of his post, citing that he was not made for this kind of mission in the East. At the end of August, he left Zhytomyr for Berlin and was promoted to SS-Oberführer for his good service. He was appointed deputy to Erwin Rösener, the SS and Police Leader of SS-Oberabschnitt Alpenland from 1 May to 28 May 1944.

Arrested by the Allies, Schulz wrote a letter to Lucius D. Clay, representative of General Dwight D. Eisenhower, requesting clemency.

At the Einsatzgruppen Trial, the Tribunal acknowledged that he had acted to oppose the "intolerable" situation that was put to him but still found him guilty and sentenced him to 20 years in prison. This sentence was commuted to 15 years in prison in January 1951. On 9 January 1954 Schulz was released from prison for war criminals in Landsberg on probation.