This article explores the life and career of Johann Reichhart – the German executioner who carried out over 3,000 executions under the Third Reich, and was later hired by the U.S. military to execute Nazi war criminals after World War II. The content is for educational and historical documentation only, based on archival records, witness testimonies, and historical sources. It does not aim to glorify violence or advocate for any political ideology.
Johann Reichhart: The Nazi Executioner Who Worked for the Americans After the War

Johann Reichhart was not merely an executioner. He was an engineer of human destruction – a man who turned the execution process into an industrial assembly line, eliminating every unnecessary second of human dignity. Under the Nazis, Reichhart carried out over 3,000 executions, primarily by the Fallbeil guillotine. He was famous for his astonishing speed: during peak hours, he could execute one prisoner every 60 to 90 seconds. But the most shocking part? After the war, the man who had served Hitler’s death machine was hired by the U.S. military to execute the very same Nazi war criminals. This is the story of Johann Reichhart – the executioner who served both sides.
1. From a Family of Executioners to Hitler’s Henchman

Johann Reichhart was born on April 29, 1893, in Wichenbach, Bavaria, into a family with an eight-generation tradition of executioners . The Reichhart family had served as official executioners for the state of Bavaria for decades. Johann was trained from a young age, inheriting traditional execution techniques.
In 1924, Reichhart officially became the executioner for the state of Bavaria. When the Nazis came to power in 1933, the demand for executions skyrocketed. Reichhart was quickly absorbed into the judicial system of the Third Reich. He was not the only executioner, but he was the most efficient.
2. Engineer of Death: Improving the Fallbeil Guillotine
Reichhart did not merely operate the guillotine – he improved it. He realized that traditional execution procedures were too slow. Strapping prisoners with leather belts took time. Positioning them on the guillotine “respectfully” was unnecessary.
Reichhart introduced the “tipping board” (Klappbank) – a hinged board that allowed the prisoner to be laid down and quickly positioned under the blade. He eliminated unnecessary steps, reducing the time between the prisoner entering the execution chamber and the blade falling to just 3 or 4 seconds.
The result was an execution machine that could process a large number of prisoners in a short time. On peak days, Reichhart could execute one prisoner every 60 to 90 seconds.
3. Famous Victims: Sophie Scholl and Hans Scholl

Reichhart executed thousands of people, but perhaps his most famous victims were Sophie Scholl and Hans Scholl – the young members of the White Rose resistance group . They were sentenced to death for distributing anti-Hitler leaflets.
On February 22, 1943, the Scholl siblings were led to the Fallbeil guillotine at Stadelheim Prison in Munich. Reichhart carried out the execution. According to witnesses, Sophie Scholl approached the guillotine with astonishing courage. Her last recorded words were: “The sun still shines.”
Reichhart later admitted that he never forgot Sophie Scholl’s courage. However, he expressed no remorse for his actions. He viewed himself merely as a civil servant, carrying out court-ordered sentences.
4. The Scale of Destruction: Over 3,000 Executions

Reichhart is estimated to have carried out 3,165 executions during his career . This number includes:
Political prisoners.
Members of the resistance movement.
Common criminals.
And after the war, Nazi war criminals.
No other executioner in German history – before or since – has reached such a number. Reichhart was the most “productive” executioner in German history.
5. The Fall of the Third Reich and His Arrest

When the Nazi regime collapsed in 1945, Reichhart was arrested by the Allies. He was imprisoned and tried as someone who had served the regime. However, he was not sentenced to death. Instead, he received a prison sentence but was quickly released.
The reason? The Allies needed him.
6. Executioner for the Americans: Executing Nazi War Criminals
After the war, the U.S. military was occupying part of Germany. They needed an executioner to carry out death sentences on Nazi war criminals. Who could do this job? Who had the experience?
The answer was Johann Reichhart.
Despite having served the Nazis, Reichhart was hired by the U.S. military to execute the very people he had once served . He carried out executions of Nazi war criminals convicted at the Dachau trials and other locations.
This irony did not escape public attention. A man who had killed hundreds for the Nazis was now killing other Nazis for the Americans.
7. Final Years and Death in Isolation
After the war, Reichhart lived a quiet life in Bavaria. He never expressed remorse for his actions. He viewed himself merely as a civil servant, following orders. He died on April 26, 1972, at the age of 79, in relative isolation.
The local community did not welcome him. Neighbors avoided him. Even his family kept their distance. The burden of killing over 3,000 people – even if it was his “duty” – was too great for anyone to bear.
8. Conclusion: The Legacy of an Engineer of Destruction
Johann Reichhart was a deeply contradictory figure. He was a professional, dedicated to his work, regardless of what that work entailed. He improved the guillotine, turning it into a more efficient killing machine. He executed resistance heroes like Sophie Scholl. But he also executed Nazi war criminals for the Allies.
Reichhart’s story raises uncomfortable questions: Can a man be considered “just following orders” when he actively improved the killing machine? Does his post-war cooperation redeem his earlier crimes? Or was he merely an opportunist, willing to work for whoever paid?
There are no easy answers. But one thing is certain: Johann Reichhart was one of the most “successful” executioners in history, and his legacy – like the guillotine itself – remains haunting to this day.