Irmgard Furchner, 96, is charged with aiding and abetting more than 11,000 murders.
A German woman who worked as a secretary at a Nazi concentration camp attempted to dodge her trial Thursday but was captured. Irmgard Furchner,96, is charged with aiding and abetting more than 11,000 murders, the Guardian reported. The case is being prosecuted in juvenile court because Furchner was 18 when she began work at the Stutthof camp in 1943. Thursday morning, she took a taxi from her nursing home to a train station and traveled into the city of Hamburg in northern Germany, according to the BBC.