Abstract
The Organization Consul was a secret, ultra-nationalist, terrorist
organization that was formed from elements of the Ehrhardt naval brigade
[Marinebrigade Erhardt] after the
brigade was dissolved by the government in the wake of the Kapp Putsch.
The group was named after “Consul Eichmann,” the alias of its leader,
Hermann Ehrhardt. The Organization Consul pursued the destruction of the
Weimar Republic through the assassination of leading politicians. It
hoped to foment a revolt on the Left, and to use that opportunity to
lead a right-wing counterrevolution. The Organization Consul was widely
assumed to have been responsible for the murders of Matthias Erzberger
and Walther Rathenau, and the attempted murder of Phillip Scheidemann.
In direct response to Rathenau’s assassination on June 24, 1922, the
government passed the Law for the Protection of the Republic
[Republikschutzgesetz] in 1922. The
law gave the security forces enhanced power to repress groups that
conspired against the state. The two main perpetrators, Erwin Kern and
Hermann Fischer, were found a few weeks later in their hiding place.
Kern died by police gunfire, Fischer by suicide to escape arrest. The
rest of those involved in the assassination attempt were charged in
October 1922 before the newly established State Court for the Protection
of the Republic. This photo shows six of the 13 defendants in the
Rathenau murder trial (from left to right): Ernst von Salomon, Ernst
Werner Techow, Karl Tillessen, Waldemar Niedrig, Friedrich Warnecke,
Hans Gert Techow. Ten of the defendants were sentenced to prison.
However, the role the Organization Consul played in the assassination
could not be proven in court.