A Hawke's Bay man who together with two other Kiwis took part in an infamous escape from a World War II prison camp were hunted down and murdered in cold blood by the Nazis, a new book tells.
Flight Lieutenant Arnold George Christensen of the Royal New Zealand Air Force was one of 76 Allied airmen who tunnelled out of the notorious "escape proof" Prisoner of War (POW) camp, Stalag Luft III on March 24-25, 1944.
Christensen, a decorated 21-year-old from Hastings, along with an Aussie comrade Squadron Leader James Catanach, who spoke fluent German, and two Norwegians, had made it from deep inside enemy territory to the coastal German town of Flensburg.
But with around 100,000 Nazis scouring the country for them, they were spotted and arrested before being interrogated by the fearsome Gestapo.
After trying without success to break the captured men, Major Johannes Post and Oskar Schmidt of the Gestapo drove them into the countryside close to the border of Germany and neutral Denmark and executed them on March 29.
Only three escapees of The Great Escape, immortalised by the 1963 Hollywood movie starring Steve McQueen, safely made it to England.
Acting on direct orders from a furious Adolf Hitler, 50 of the escaped men were murdered, including Christensen and two fellow Kiwis, Flying Officer Porokoru Patapu (Johnny) Pohe and Squadron Leader John Williams DFC (Distinguished Flying Cross).
A new book by English author Simon Read tells the story of the remarkable manhunt by a detective-sergeant from Blackpool after the war to track down the merciless killers.
Frank McKenna, a member of the Special Investigation Branch (SIB) of the RAF Police dubbed 'Sherlock Holmes', criss-crossed post-war Europe with Wing Commander Wilfred 'Freddie' Bowes on their impassioned crusade.
"Each murder case proved to have its own challenges, as they pursued every clue in the search for justice," Mr Read writes in a Daily Mail serialisation of his book, Human Game: Hunting the Great Escape Murderers.
By May 1947, they had tracked down 329 suspects - 23 of whom were directly complicit in the Great Escape killings.
And soon afterwards, they trapped the man responsible for slaying Christensen.
The commandant of the holding facility in Minden called McKenna to say that the North West Europe War Crimes Unit had just brought in a man working as a haulage contractor.
The man's name was given as Johannes Pohlmann, but he had been identified by a witness as being former Gestapo officer Johannes Post.
His cover blown, the "arrogant and sneering" Post freely admitted to knowing all about the murders of Christensen and his three mates.
He even admitted that the last word the Australian Catanach had uttered was, 'Why?'
Post and 17 others went on trial at the British Military Court in Hamburg in July 1947 charged with committing war crimes by killing and ordering to kill POWs who had escaped from Stalag Luft III.
All the defendants in what was known as the 'Sagan case' denied the charges, but were all found guilty. Post and 13 others were sentenced to hang.
The death sentence was carried out six months later.
The ashes of the three New Zealanders, along with the other 47 murdered men, are interred at Poznan Old Garrison Cemetery in Poland, the former site of Stalag Luft III itself.