Ruth Closius-Neudeck (5 July 1920 – 29 July 1948) was a Nazi Party Schutzstaffel (SS) supervisor at a Nazi concentration camp complex from December 1944 until March 1945. She was executed for War crime for her role in the Holocaust.
In the Ravensbrück camp, she was known as one of the most ruthless female guards. Former French prisoner Geneviève de Gaulle-Anthonioz commented after the war that she had seen Neudeck "cut the throat of an inmate with the sharp edge of her shovel". Another survivor testified that Neudeck "took off the clothes of some inmates, poured cold water over them and made them stand in the cold for hours."
In December 1944, Neudeck was promoted to the rank of Oberaufseherin, and moved to the Uckermark extermination complex subcamp close to Ravensbrück. There she was involved in the selection and execution of over 5,000 women and children and running of the gas chambers. The prisoners were mistreated by Neudeck or her fellow SS . In March 1945, Neudeck became head of the Barth subcamp.
The British court found Neudeck guilty of and sentenced her to death by hanging. On 29 July 1948, she was executed by British executioner Albert Pierrepoint on the gallows at Hamelin Prison.
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