A. Yes.
Q. Now, were some of those killed political prisoners?
A. Yes.
Q. Is there any way of telling whether or not a prisoner had been condemned to death—that is, when the experimental subject arrived in the pressure chamber, was there any way to know whether he had been condemned to death?
A. Once the experimental subjects came from the Bunker, that is, if the SS brought them out, we could always tell they were prisoners who had been condemned to death. When the inmates were sent by the camp leader, and were brought there by him, then we could also tell they were persons who came from the camp, and that they were not persons who had been condemned to death.
Q. Could Romberg know this just as you did?
A. He could only know it if he tried to find out about it, because he could hardly differentiate whether the person concerned came from the Bunker or came from the camps.
Q. But you could tell that yourself?
A. Yes.
Q. Did Romberg ever ask you whether or not these experimental subjects had been condemned to death?