WOULD NOT SPY
GERMAN IN DENMARK HUNTED BY GESTAPO LONDON, Dec. 4. Johannes Ole Paulsen, a German, was working in Copenhagen six years ago, when the Gestapo went to see him. They told him he had to be a spy for them in Denmark. Paulsen refused. And since then the _ Gestapo have hunted him “like a wild beast” in city after city, country after country, in Europe. At Marlborough street Police Court his story was told when Paulsen, who lives in York street, Marylebone, N.W., was charged with being found in the United Kingdom while a deportation order was in force against him. He was gailed for 14 days.
After Paulsen refused to be a spy his passport was taken from him. He fled to Paris. Hide and Seek
Then he came on to England on an irregular passport, said the police, and worked in the film industry at Elstree.
In 1937, on the advice of friends, he gave himself up. He was recommended for deportation.
He left the train at Brussels, and for the next 18 months fled from the Gestapo in different countries. He returned to England in February.
Mr. Donald Mclntyre, defending him, said: —•
“He has been hunted like a wild beast since 1933 for the one and only reason that he refused to become an agent—only a polite word for a spy—for the Nazis in Denmark. “I-Ie was hunted from country to country. He could not stay in one country because of renewed German efforts to get him. “His whole interests were Danish, and who knows his fate if he had gone back?”
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Bibliographic details
Gisborne Herald, Volume LXVII, Issue 20141, 10 January 1940, Page 4
Word Count
267WOULD NOT SPY Gisborne Herald, Volume LXVII, Issue 20141, 10 January 1940, Page 4
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