- 84 Avenue Foch
Number 84 Avenue Foch was a
building in Paris used by theGestapo during the German occupation of Paris in World War II.The location is found on
Avenue Foch , a wide residentialboulevard in theXVIe arrondissement which connects theArc de Triomphe and the Porte Dauphine.During the German occupation of northern France, the buildings at numbers 82, 84 and 86 of the Avenue Foch were taken over by the
counter-intelligence branch of the Gestapo, known as theSicherheitsdienst , or SD.Number 84 was used for imprisonment and
interrogation of foreign agents captured in France, such as those of the BritishSpecial Operations Executive . There were frequent transfers of prisoners between number 84 andFresnes prison on the outskirts of the city.The second floor housed the SD's
wireless section controlled by Josef Goetz, from where the 'radio game' with SOE was conducted, using captured wireless sets andcode s to transmit bogus messages.The fourth floor was taken up by the office and private quarters of
SS Sturmbannführer Josef Kieffer , who was in charge at number 84, and the office of his assistant.On the fifth (top) floor were the guardroom, an interpreter's office, and cells for the confinement of prisoners under interrogation.
A senior interrogator at number 84 was Ernest Vogt, a Swiss-German
civilian who since 1940 had been attached to the SD as a civil auxiliary in the capacity oftranslator and interpreter.
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