Anton Malloth (13 February 1912 – 31 October 2002) was a supervisor in the "Kleine Festung" (Small Fortress) part of the Theresienstadt concentration camp.
In the interrogation in front of a judge in Innsbruck, he played down his role in the Gestapo prison and denied having been involved with torture and murder.
After numerous witness testimonials, the Czechoslovak court in Litoměřice town ruled that there was no doubt that Malloth had beaten to death about 100 detainees.
In spite of several applications for extradition by Germany and Austria, the German consulate in Milan issued him new passports as the previous ones expired.
Gudrun Burwitz, the daughter of Heinrich Himmler, was instructed by the "Stille Hilfe" to rent a comfortable room for him in a home for the aged, which was built on land formerly owned by Rudolf Hess.
When it became public in the late nineties that the social welfare office had paid most of the expenses of Malloth's room, there was much criticism in the German media.