During the Second World War, she was a secretary to Adolf Eichmann and noted down the results of the talks at the Wannsee Conference in Berlin on 20 January 1942.
At the beginning of March 1940, she joined the Reich Security Main Office, where she eventually worked for Eichmann.
[3] At the conference, high-ranking representatives of the party and the state coordinated the persecution and murder of the European Jews.
He sees Wagner as an example of how German post-war society was hardly interested in dealing with national socialist crimes, legally or otherwise.
"[5] Christian Mentel on the other hand follows the theory that Werlemann was the note taking secretary,[6] and on the website of the present day museum of the Wannsee conference house, Wolfgang Benz briefly mentions an "unknown female secretary" (einer unbekannten Sekretärin) that helped Eichmann with the notes.