Paul Otto Geibel
Paul Otto Geibel was a German SS-Brigadeführer and Generalmajor of police who served as the last SS and Police Leader "Warsaw" during the Second World War. He was involved in suppressing the Warsaw Uprising and in the subsequent destruction of the city. At the end of the war, he was convicted of war crimes and committed suicide while serving a life sentence in Poland.
Early life
Geibel was born in Dortmund, the son of a school director. On the outbreak of the First World War, he left school and joined the Imperial German Navy. He served at sea and in the coastal artillery, finishing his service aboard the battlecruiser SMS Hindenburg, and rising to the rank of Leutnant zur see. After the war, he returned to civilian life and worked as an insurance salesman from 1920 to 1933. He joined the Nazi Party and its paramilitary wing, the SA, in December 1931. He was commissioned an SA-Sturmführer in December 1933.Peacetime police career
From the end of 1933 until March 1935, Geibel worked in the Berlin headquarters of the SA police corps, eventually rising in rank to an SA-Sturmbannführer. In April 1935, he joined the Gendarmerie, or rural police force, a branch of the Ordnungspolizei reporting to the Ministry of the Interior. From April 1935 to October 1942, he was assigned to the Interior Ministry, administering the force's motorized components with the rank of Major. In addition, he was admitted to the SS in December 1938 as an SS-Sturmbannführer. From October 1942 to the end of March 1944, he headed "Group Command Office II" in the Hauptamt of the Ordnungspolizei.Second World War
On 31 March 1944, Geibel was transferred to the General Government and named the SS and Police Leader in Warsaw, as the permanent replacement to SS-Brigadeführer Franz Kutschera who had been assassinated on 1 February. Geibel would be the last person to hold this position. On 1 August 1944, the Warsaw uprising was launched by the Polish Home Army. As the commander of all the SS and police forces in the city, Geibel was one of the chief participants in the suppression of the uprising, and was involved in the massacre in the Mokotów prison that resulted in the murder of approximately 600 inmates. Following the defeat of the Polish forces, Geibel played a key role in the retaliatory destruction of Warsaw ordered by Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler. On 12 October 1944, Himmler appointed Geibel to oversee the operation. He was granted full powers to expel the population and to obliterate the Polish capital, which was largely razed to the ground. Geibel was promoted to his final rank of SS-Brigadeführer and Generalmajor of police on 26 October 1944. He left his post as SSPF in Warsaw on 1 February 1945 and was appointed commander of the Ordnungspolizei forces in Prague in the Protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia where he remained until the end of the war in Europe on 8 May 1945.| SS and Police Ranks | SS and Police Ranks |
| Date | Rank |
| 1 April 1935 | Major der gendarmerie |
| 1 December 1938 | SS-Sturmbannführer |
| 1 July 1939 | SS-Obersturmbannführer |
| 14 July 1942 | Oberst der gendarmerie |
| 1 October 1942 | SS-Standartenführer |
| 20 April 1943 | SS-Oberführer |
| 26 October 1944 | SS-Brigadeführer und Generalmajor der polizei |