Bolko von Schweinichen

Bolko von Schweinichen (1 May 1896, Bytom - ???) was a police official in Nazi Germany who, for the majority of the German occupation of France, served as the commander of the regular German police (the Ordnungspolizei) in Paris.

Von Schweinichen served in the Imperial German Army during the First World War and was commissioned a Lieutenant (Leutnant) in 1914. After the war, he joined the German police and during the 1920s served as a Police Captain in Silesia. In May of 1933, four months after Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany, von Schweinichen became a Nazi Party member and held Party #2,152,299.

Upon the consolidation of all police forces in Germany under the national structure of the Order Police, von Schweinichen was appointed a Major in the Schutzpolizei with date of rank from November 9, 1935. Upon the outbreak of war, von Schweinichen was assigned to homeland police duties and was promoted to a Lieutenant Colonel of Police in 1940. In 1942, he was deployed to France where he became the Befehlshaber der Ordnungspolizei in the city of Paris. Under his command were garrison police units in Paris which were consolidated in 1943 to form the 4th SS Police Regiment.

By 1944, von Schweinichen had been promoted to Colonel of Police and was reassigned to Germany after the invasion of Normandy and the liberation of Paris. In 1945, he was appointed the police district commander for Berlin (Befehlshaber der Ordnungspolizei im Wehrkreis III - Berlin) and held this post until the end of the war. His post war fate is unknown.

Dates of rank

References

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