BASIL MAXIMOWITCH.
Basil Pawlowitch Maximowitch, alias "PROFESSOR" was in 1940 recruited by Madame Erlik for Trepper's service. Established his own group of agents and informants, working for Trepper, exploited his personal relations with Fraulein Hoffmann-Scholtz in order to obtain intelligence from the offices of the German Adminstration in Paris. Also had good sources in the German Army of occupation and in White Russian circles.

Introduced his sister Anna to Trepper in the autumn of 1941.

Was arrested in December 1941, or January 1942, following Trepper's capture and denunciation.


Personal particulars.

Nationality: Russian.

Date of birth: 22-07-1902 in tschernigow, USSR.

Occupation: Mining engineer.

Relatives: Brother of Amma Maximowitch. Son of a Czarist general.


History.

Left Russia via Turkey for France in his youth and took a degree in a French University.

A White Russian, he gradually turned to the "Left" and eventually became an active member of the French Communist Party, under cover, remaining in touch with White Russian circles.

Was interned as a Communist in September 1939.

Released in the summer of 1940 for interpreter duties by the Germans. Returned to Paris.

Ultimate fate unknown.



Source: KV3/351.





Basile Maximovitch (2 July 1902, Chernigov - c. 6 July 1943, Plötzensee Prison, Berlin) was a Russian aristocrat and civil mining engineer. He became a Soviet agent by choice and subsequently became an important member of the Red Orchestra organisation in France during World War II. Maximovitch was the son of a Cavalry officer Baron Maximovitch, who held the rank of General, on the staff of Imperial Russian Army.

Maximovitch was a Russian émigré who left Russia with his sister Anna Maximovitch in 1922 to escape the Russian Revolution. He arrived via Constantinople to settle in Paris, France. In Paris, the couple received help from Auxiliary bishop Emanuel-Anatole-Raphaël Chaptal de Chanteloup, who helped Maximovitch to train as civil engineer and enter the Lycée Saint-Louis-de-Gonzague as a teacher. Through Chaptal, Maximovitch developed extensive connections with white émigré communities in Paris and abroad.

On 31 May 1940, he was interned as a foreign suspect at Camp Vernet. He became an interpreter for the German officer in charge, Wehrmacht colonel Hans Kuprian, who was on a committee that processed prisoners from the Vichy government for slave labour after the French armistice. He released Maximovitch in August 1940. In prison, Maximovitch met Belarusian Samuel Erlik, who had links to Soviet Intelligence and was encourage to recruit Maximovitch by the Soviet embassy. Maximovitch became an informer out of a belief in Russian Nationalism and no love for the Soviet Regime or communism.

Maximovitch had an affair with Margarete Hoffman-Scholz, secretary to Kuprian, and a niece to General Carl-Heinrich von Stülpnagel, military commander of Paris; At the time, von Stülpnagel was Commander of Greater Paris and this gave Maximovitch access to intelligence that came from the German High Command. Maximovitch help to steer Hoffman-Scholz through a number of different jobs in German agencies that enabled Maximovitch to access different types of intelligence.

In November 1940, Maximovitch was introduced to Leopold Trepper, by a member of the French Communist Party. At the time, Trepper was the technical director of a Soviet Red Army Intelligence unit in western Europe. Both Basil and Anna became very important to Trepper. Maximovitch ran the 3rd network of Trepper's 7 networks in Europe, supplying intelligence garnered from White Russians emigrant groups as well as from groups in the German Wehrmacht.

Maximovitch was arrested with his sister on 12 December 1942 at 14 rue Émile Zola in Choisy-le-Roi by French police and taken to be interrogated at Rue des Saussaies by members of the Sonderkommando Rote Kapelle, a special Gestapo and Abwehr commission establish to track down members of the Red Orchestra in France, Belgium and Low Countries. When the interrogation was complete, then were sent to Fresnes Prison.

A trial was held on 8 March 1943 at 62-64 Rue du Faubourg-Saint-Honoré by Luftwaffe Judge Manfred Roeder where he was sentenced to death by decapitation. He and his sister were taken to Plötzensee Prison where they were executed in July 1943.


Source: Wikipedia.