Outside the building, guards dropped in cyanide pellets. Then they'd blow the cyanide gas out and remove the bodies next door to the crematorium ovens. I think this is what happened to most of the truly psychotic prisoners and those they considered unruly and unmanageable and who, in the Gestapo's opinion, were incorrigibles. But, in my opinion, only relatively few of the inmates I personally examined at Dachau were murdered in this manner. Still, medical facilities were totally inadequate. When people fell hopelessly ill and death was imminent, and when they grew so weak they could no longer work or function, they were taken to the cyanide room for disposal. The Nazi called them 'mercy killings' because there was no hope of them getting well. Actually, the Germans considered them a liability, and extermination was the answer."
('Crime Doctor,' McCallum & Larson, p. 61. ISBN 0-916076-20-2; Library of Congress Catalog Number: 78-16403)
>>553131 Pyydän syvästi anteeksi, että pilaan paskat juttusi faktoilla. Kokeile rohkeasti uudelleen, sillä paskahan ei maailmasta lopu, kuten eivät lopu kaltaisesi paskanlevittäjätkään.
>>553214 Tota, kuule.. Kaikki tän ketjun läpi silmäilleet on tajunnu et sun pitäis olla jossain pakkolaitoksessa, ainoa epäselvä asia oli et olisko oikea osoite hourula vai vammaiskoti.