Was justice served?
For three years during the Second World War, 12,000 Nazis were held in a
prisoner-of-war camp at the edge of Medicine Hat, an isolated city of
12,000 people on the bald Canadian prairie. The camp and the townsfolk
lived cheerfully side-by-side until two men were beaten and hanged by
their fellow prisoners and no one on the scene would admit to knowing
anything about the crimes. RCMP investigators infiltrated the camp and
discovered the existence of a shadow Nazi government, complete with its
own Gestapo responsible for enforcing discipline and loyalty to the
Fuhrer. Suspects were identified. Charges were laid. A series of
gripping trials resulted in the last mass hanging in Canadian history.
Now, eighty years after the fact, acclaimed historian Nathan Greenfield
presents stunning new evidence that raises grave questions about whether
justice was served on either side of the wire in Medicine Hat.