NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27 Page 31 · 31 of 188
GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 738, sig. 110-5/27
English Translation
16a - - 28 - I have mentioned that in our trust-man organization there were also employees of the Austrian consulates and the German secret offices. I refer in particular to Franz Kopecký. Apart from him there were nock others, especially Mrs. Villa Puditská, who was employed in the secret office of Dr. Alberts, the financial agent of the Berlin government, and also Dr. Goričar, the Consul General in San Franzisko, you saw well behind the scenes of Austria and Germany and were at our disposal. It opened a large office to which no one had access and which was visited in three to four years véu rich uehr ala 4 to 5 people; there we collected and photographed various documents etc. I have e.g. A letter that shows that the Berlin government negotiated with the Mexican government and spoke to it tremendously (in the United States and in the US, Texas, when Mexico entered the war against the US. All the letters were photographed (by Mrázek), then put back in place. - The eigobnis of this work was gowaitig. ==References== 'The supply of the submarines in the Atlantic has been tapped, thanks to a Czech woman, the wife of a German opérate rs a wireless station.This Czech woman whose name I do not want to give for understandable reasons, good news about where' some ship should meet a German submarine and supply it, At this time we already received from the English the concession that :wei Kreuzer moved near the American shore according to user instructions. What our office wanted was done, We stopped neutral ships. The admiral of the English naval power Sir Hall refused in no case our wish. Swedish and Dutch ships were stopped, on which there were persons who carried all the news to Berlin and Vienna. In this way, the well-known American Jóurnalist Archibald was also held and hundreds of German and Austrian officials were captured, who had Russian passports,