Jail hell of Second World War traitor's brother
The brother of Lord Haw-Haw, the notorious Second World War propagandist, was interned for four years by the British government even though the security services believed he was innocent of any crime and posed no danger to the country....
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Edwin Quentin Joyce, a member of the National Socialist League, was interned in 1939 shortly after the outbreak of war and his brother William’s escape to Germany.
The security services became suspicious of his links to a suspected German agent called Christian Bauer who he had met prior to the outbreak of the war and with whom he corresponded.
They believed Bauer’s repeated request for rare stamps from particular British colonies in several of his letters was actually a request for Joyce to send over detailed maps. At the time Joyce, 22, was working at the Air Ministry.
But newly declassified documents from the National Archives, in Kew, south west London, which contain pleas from Joyce for his release, also show that agents who interrogated him became convinced that he was innocent and should be released.
Read entire article at Telegraph
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Edwin Quentin Joyce, a member of the National Socialist League, was interned in 1939 shortly after the outbreak of war and his brother William’s escape to Germany.
The security services became suspicious of his links to a suspected German agent called Christian Bauer who he had met prior to the outbreak of the war and with whom he corresponded.
They believed Bauer’s repeated request for rare stamps from particular British colonies in several of his letters was actually a request for Joyce to send over detailed maps. At the time Joyce, 22, was working at the Air Ministry.
But newly declassified documents from the National Archives, in Kew, south west London, which contain pleas from Joyce for his release, also show that agents who interrogated him became convinced that he was innocent and should be released.