Shortly after midnight on the morning of June 13, 1942,
four men landed on a beach near Amagansett, Long Island,
New York, from a German submarine, clad in German
uniforms and bringing ashore enough explosives, primers,
and incendiaries to support an expected two-year career
in the sabotage of American defense-related production.
On June 17, 1942, a similar group landed on Ponte Vedra
Beach, near Jacksonville, Florida, equipped for a
similar career in industrial disruption.
The purpose of the invasions was to strike a major blow
for Germany by bringing the violence of war to our home
ground through destruction of America's ability to
manufacture vital equipment and supplies and transport
them to the battlegrounds of Europe; to strike fear into
the American civilian population, and diminish the
resolve of the United States to overcome our enemies.
By June 27, 1942, all eight saboteurs had been arrested
without having accomplished one act of destruction.
Tried before a Military Commission, they were found
guilty. One was sentenced to life imprisonment, another
to thirty years, and six received the death penalty,
which was carried out within a few days.
The magnitude of the euphoric expectation of the Nazi
war machine may be judged by the fact that, in addition
to the large amount of material brought ashore by the
saboteurs, they were given $175,200 in United States
currency to finance their activities. On apprehension, a
total of $174,588 was recovered by the FBI -- the only
positive accomplishment of eight trained saboteurs in
those two weeks was the expenditure of $612 for
clothing, meals, lodging, and travel, as well as a bribe
of $260.
So shaken was the German intelligence service that no
similar sabotage attempt was ever again made. The German
naval high command did not again allow a valuable
submarine to be risked for a sabotage mission.
On September 1, 1939, World War II opened in Europe with
the invasion of Poland by Nazi Germany. The United
States remained neutral until drawn into the world
conflict by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on
December 7, 1941. War was declared against Japan by the
United States on December 8, 1941; and, on the 11th,
Germany and Italy declared war against the United
States.
During the early months of the war, the major
contributions of the United States to oppose the Nazi
war machine involved industrial production, equipment,
and supplies furnished to those forces actively
defending themselves against the German armed forces.
That industrial effort was strong enough to generate
frustration, perhaps indignation, among the Nazi high
command; and the order was given, allegedly by Hitler
himself, to mount a serious effort to reduce American
production.
German intelligence settled on sabotage as the most
effective means of diminishing our input. In active
charge of the project was Lieutenant Walter Kappe,
attached to Abwehr-2 (Intelligence 2) who had spent some
years in the United States prior to the war and had been
active in the German-American Bund and other efforts in
the United States to propagandize and win adherents for
Nazism among German Americans and German immigrants in
America. Kappe was also an official of the Ausland
Institute, which, prior to the war, organized Germans
abroad into the Nationalsozialistiche Deutshe
Arbeiterpartei, the NSDAP or Nazi Party, and during the
conflict, Ausland kept track of and in touch with
persons in Germany who had returned from abroad. Kappe's
responsibility concerned those who had returned from the
United States.
Early in 1942, he contacted, among others, those who
ultimately undertook the mission to the United States.
Each consented to the task, apparently willingly,
although unaware of the specific assignment. Most of the
potential saboteurs were taken from civilian jobs, but
two were in the German army.
The trainees, about twelve in all, were told of their
specific mission only when they entered a sabotage
school established near Berlin which instructed them in
chemistry, incendiaries, explosives, timing devices,
secret writing, and concealment of identity by blending
into an American background. The intensive training
included the practical use of the techniques under
realistic conditions.
Subsequently, the saboteurs were taken to aluminum and
magnesium plants, railroad shops, canals, locks, and
other facilities to familiarize them with the vital
points and vulnerabilities of the types of targets they
were to attack. Maps were used to locate those American
targets, spots where railroads could be most effectively
disabled, the principal aluminum and magnesium plants,
and important canals, waterways, and locks. All
instructions had to be memorized.
On May 26, 1942, the first group of four saboteurs left
by submarine from the German base at Lorient, France,
and on May 28, the next group of four departed the same
base. Each was destined to land at points on the
Atlantic Coast of the United States familiar to the
leader of that group.
Four men, led by George John Dasch, age 39, landed on a
beach near Amagansett, Long Island, New York, about
12:10 a.m., June 13, 1942. Accompanying Dasch were
Ernest Peter Burger, 36; Heinrich Harm Heinck, 35; and
Richard Quirin, 34.

George John Dasch
|

Ernest Peter Burger
|

Heinrich Harm Heinck
|

Richard Quirin
|
On June 17, 1942, the other group landed at Ponte Vedra
Beach, Florida, south of Jacksonville. The leader was
Edward John Kerling, age 33; with Werner Thiel, 35;
Herman Otto Neubauer, 32 (no photo available); and
Herbert Hans Haupt, 22. Both groups landed wearing
complete or partial German uniforms to ensure treatment
as prisoners of war rather than as spies if they were
caught in the act of landing.

John Kerling
|
Werner
Thiel
|

Herbert Hans Haupt
|
Having landed unobserved, the uniforms were quickly
discarded, to be buried with the sabotage material
(which was intended to be later retrieved), and civilian
clothing was donned. The saboteurs quickly dispersed.
The Florida group made their way to Jacksonville, then
by train to Cincinnati, with two going on to Chicago and
the other pair to New York City.

Contents of box recovered from spot
where buried on beach south of Jacksonville, FL,
showing electric blasting caps, pen and pencil
delay mechanisms, detonators, ampoules of acid,
and other time delay devices
|

Pen and Pencil assembled for use as
delay device
|

|
 |
|
Disassembled timing device showing
component parts |

Capsule containing sulphuric acid
encased in a rubber tubing for protection
|
The
Long Island group was less fortunate; scarcely had they
buried their equipment and uniforms, in fact, one still
wore bathing trunks, when a Coast Guardsman patrolling
the shore approached. He was unarmed and very suspicious
of them, more so when they offered him a bribe to forget
they had met. He ostensibly accepted the bribe to lull
their fears and promptly reported the incident to his
headquarters. However, by the time the search patrol
located the spot, the saboteurs had reached a railroad
station and had taken a train to New York City.
Dasch's resolution to be a saboteur for the Fatherland
faltered -- perhaps he thought the whole project so
grandiose as to be impractical and wanted to protect
himself before some of his companions took action on
similar doubts. He indicated to Burger his desire to
confess everything.
On
the evening of June 14, 1942, Dasch, giving the name
"Pastorius" called the New York Office of the FBI
stating he had recently arrived from Germany and would
call FBI Headquarters when he was in Washington, D.C.,
the following week. On the morning of Friday, June 19, a
call was received at the FBI, Washington, from Dasch,
then registered at a Washington hotel. He alluded to his
prior call as "Pastorius" (of which Headquarters was
aware) and furnished his location. He was immediately
contacted and taken into custody.
During the next several days he was thoroughly
interrogated and he furnished the identities of the
other saboteurs, possible locations for some, and data
which would enable their more expeditious apprehension.
The
three remaining members of the Long Island group were
picked up in New York City on June 20. Of the Florida
group, Kerling and Thiel were arrested in New York City
on June 23, and Neubauer and Haupt were arrested in
Chicago on June 27.
The
eight were tried before a Military Commission, comprised
of seven U.S. Army officers appointed by President
Roosevelt, from July 8, to August 4, 1942. The trial was
held in the Department of Justice Building, Washington,
D.C. The prosecution was headed by Attorney General
Frances Biddle and the Army Judge Advocate General,
Major General Myron C. Cramer. Defense counsel included
Colonel Kenneth C. Royall (later Secretary of War under
President Truman) and Major Lausen H. Stone (son of
Harlan Fiske Stone, the Chief Justice of the U.S.
Supreme Court).
All
eight were found guilty and sentenced to death. Attorney
General Biddle and J. Edgar Hoover appealed to President
Roosevelt to commute the sentences of Dasch and Burger.
Dasch then received a 30-year sentence, and Burger
received a life sentence, both to be served in a federal
penitentiary. The remaining six were executed at the
District of Columbia Jail on August 8, 1942.
After Pearl Harbor -- J. Edgar
Hoover personally issued approval for the custodial
detention of J. Paul Getty;
as an enemy of the USA.
