
The forgotten story of WWII's baby-faced assassins who, aged just 14 and 16, seduced Nazis in bars before luring them to their deaths
They were only teenagers at the outbreak of World War II, but they soon used their harmless appearance to gain the trust of the officers before luring them to their deaths.
Now, their stories are back in the spotlight after being shared on Instagram, with fans calling for their heroic acts against the face of evil to be made into movies, bemoaning the 'seven million Spider-Man or Batman reboots' viewers get instead.
Freddie and Truus joined the Dutch resistance at the ages of 14 and 16, respectively, after witnessing horrifying violence by the Nazis, who invaded their home nation, The Netherlands, in 1940.
Truus, born on 29 August 1923, in Schoten, had been protecting Jewish children, dissidents and homosexuals in safe houses across Haarlem, near Amsterdam, during the Second World War.
But aged 16 she saw a baby battered to death in front of its family by a Nazi - and following the terrifying moment, she and her younger sister Freddie turned to killing all the soldiers they could.
Truus recalled in Sophie Poldermans' Seducing and Killing Nazis: Hannie, Truus And Freddie: Dutch Resistance Heroines Of World War II: 'He grabbed the baby and hit it against the wall.
'The father and sister had to watch. They were obviously hysterical. The child was dead,' the resistance fighter said, according to the New York Post.
Truus claimed she aimed her gun at him and fired, adding she did not regret slaying the 'cancerous tumours in our society'.
Alongside her sister Freddie, born in Haarlem, near Amsterdam on September 6, 1925, and raised by their communist mother, and their law student friend Hannie Schaft, the trio became played a clandestine role in the resistance.
The team had a routine: first approach the Nazi men in bars, and, having successfully seduced them, ask if they wanted to 'go for a stroll' in the forest, where, as Freddie herself put it, they would be 'liquidated'.
'We had to do it,' she told one interviewer. 'It was a necessary evil, killing those who betrayed the good people.' When asked how many people she had killed or helped kill, she demurred: 'One should not ask a soldier any of that.'
Freddie acted as a courier for the resistance to begin with but was soon drafted into seducing Nazis with bright-red lipstick and pretending to be drunk alongside her sister and a 20-year-old Hannie.
The law student, who had red hair and crystal-white teeth, through herself into the role by learning German and perfecting casual conversations with the soldiers.
After luring them into the woods, she or a male companion would quickly shoot the unassuming officer.
Author Ms Poldermans explained: 'They were killers, but they also tried hard to remain human. They tried to shoot their targets from the back so that they didn't know they were going to die.'
The sisters have never revealed how many people they killed and despite Ms Poldermans being friends with them for 20 years, it does not feature in her book.
But Truus did confess to breaking down in tears or fainting after killing someone, adding 'I wasn't born to kill.'
Freddie - who died on September 5, 2018, one day before her 93rd birthday - was the last surviving member of the Netherlands' most famous female resistance cell, who dedicated their lives to fighting Nazi occupiers and Dutch 'traitors'.
The female members of the Dutch resistance are often overlooked, and it was and still is often thought of as a man's effort.
However, this kind of thinking proved to be a fatal mistake to many Nazi men, who did not recognise the threat posed by the Oversteegen sisters as they rode their bikes around Haarlem, scouting out targets or acting as lookouts for other executions.
Both Oversteegen sisters survived the war. Truus found work as an artist, and was inspired to write a memoir and based on her experiences in the resistance. She died in 2016.
Freddie told Vice that she coped with the traumas of the war 'by getting married and having babies.'
She married Jan Dekker and their three children survive her, as do her four grandchildren.
However, speaking after his mother's death in 2018, Freddie's son Remi Dekker told the Observer: 'If you ask me, the war only ended two weeks ago.
'In her mind it was still going on, and on, and on. It didn't stop, even until the last day... She shot a few people, and these were the real, real bad guys. But she hated it, and she hated herself for doing it.'
In the years leading up to her death, Freddie suffered from several heart attacks at the nursing home in Driehuis where she lived - about five miles outside Haarlem.
The Oversteegen siblings' friend Hannie Schaft, a onetime law student with fiery red hair, was captured and executed by the Nazis just weeks before they surrendered.
'Hannie was her soulmate friend. Freddie could never understand why the Nazis killed her just before the end of the war. She always took red roses to her grave,' revealed Manon Hoornstra, after the youngest Oversteegen sister shared many of her war time memories with the documentary maker.
In Hannie's honour, Truus founded the National Hannie Schaft Foundation in 1996. Freddie served as a board member.
'Schaft became the national icon of female resistance,' said Jeroen Pliester, the foundation's chairman. Her story was taught to Dutch children and retold in a 1981 Dutch film, 'The Girl With the Red Hair'.
For the sisters, their work with the resistance wasn't something they would ever regret, but it left its emotional scars.
They both dealt with 'post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), enduring severe nightmares, screaming and fighting in their sleep,' revealed human rights activist Ms Poldermans to Time magazine in 2019.
The author added: 'These women never saw themselves as heroines. They were extremely dedicated and believed they had no other option but to join the resistance. They never regretted what they did during the war.'
'It was tragic and very difficult and we cried about it afterwards,' Truus said, about the feeling of having killed somebody.
'We did not feel it suited us - it never suits anybody, unless they are real criminals. One loses everything. It poisons the beautiful things in life.'
Their mother gave Truus and Freddie only one rule, 'always stay human', the sisters once recalled.
The Dutch newspaper IJmuider Courant, reported that Freddie once told an interviewer: 'I've shot a gun myself and I've seen them fall. And what is inside us at such a moment? You want to help them get up.'
During the later years of her life, Freddie strived for more acknowledgment of her role, and both sisters eventually received the Dutch Mobilization War Cross in 2014, before a street was named after each of them.
'So many years after doing their work in the shadows, they were glad for the public recognition,' Ms Poldermans told the publication.
'They wanted their stories to be known - to teach people that, as Truus put it, even when the work is hard, 'you must always remain human.''
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
The EncoChats that led cops to 'treatment room' torture chamber: Cops uncover drug gang's sound-proofed shipping container hiding dentist chair, pliers, scalpels and hedge cutters
After blasting their way inside with explosives, the sight greeting armed police was impossibly grim: a dentist's chair with leather straps by the arms and legs. Nearby, a pair of handcuffs, alongside pliers, scalpels and hedge cutters. The gangland torture chamber, located inside a sound-proofed shipping container near the Dutch village of Wouwse Plantage, could hardly have been more gruesome. Yet, as well as horror, police would have been feeling something else too - satisfaction. For the discovery was an early sign that one of the biggest international police operations in history was sure to be a triumph. The find would be one of first following a three-year investigation that successfully infiltrated EncroChat, an encrypted messaging platform used by organised criminals - many of them British. The network was breached by French and Dutch police in March 2020 and the data shared with forces across Europe, who scrambled to gather evidence on gang bosses before EncroChat users were told of the hack on June 13. Many are continuing to face their days in court, with feared Manchester gang boss Jamie Rothwell, 38, jailed just last week. Gangsters were so confident in EncroChat's encryption that they openly discussed assassinations, revenge attacks and multi-million-pound drug deals - providing a treasure trove of evidence for police to use in court. Suggestions something dark was going on at the compound near Wouwse Plantage emerged in EncroChat exchanges referring to a 'treatment room', with one message stating: 'We need cutting pliers for fingers and toes'. There were further hints to torture, including, 'We must have enough belts and tie-wraps to tie them' and, 'If I've got him on the chair, more will come. I wasn't a fan of kids. S***, by Allah, kids are allowed too.' Another text referred to the torture chamber's sound insulation, with the user writing: 'It's triple isolated. Even if you're standing next to it, you'll hear nothing.' Other worrying interceptions spoke of the 'ebi,' a reference to a high security Dutch prison. Gang members even exchanged photos of the torture room and dentist's chair with belts attached to the arm and foot supports. After putting the compound under surveillance, police spotted several men working to kit out the prison cells. When police eventually raided the site on June 22, 2020, six other containers were set up to hold prisoners, all lined with foil in an effort to deter the victims from being spotted on thermal imaging cameras. Mercifully, neither the torture chamber nor the makeshift prison were ever used, and 11 men were sentenced in 2022 to jail terms of between one and nine years. The ringleader, named by Dutch media as Roger P, 50, had previously been jailed for 15 years for cocaine trafficking and received an additional 33-month sentence. He is one of hundreds of kingpins who have been brought to justice using EncroChat evidence. Crucially, malware installed by telecoms experts allowed messages to be recovered in real time, allowing last-minute interventions that undoubtedly saved lives. While users hid under anonymous handles, many implicated themselves by sharing personal details, and even selfies. Manchester gang boss Jamie Rothwell was identified as the user 'Live Long' after sharing a photo of himself with two fingers raised to the camera. A leading member of Manchester's Anti A-Team gang, Rothwell fled abroad after a gunman sprayed bullets at him at a car wash in 2015 as part of a murderous gang feud with their rivals, the A Team. But he continued directing drug and gun smuggling operations into the UK from his bolthole in Barcelona. When shown a picture of an AK-47 rifle with magazines and ammunition, Rothwell retorted: 'Makes me hard that bro'. He also bragged of moving 300 guns, having rocket-propelled grenades, machine guns and an anti-tank gun, writing: 'I sell a lot of Glocks'. In other messages, Rothwell described his hatred for a gang rival, Leon Cullen. He wrote: 'I've give Leon a way out….he a grass…he turned on me for nothing 'Tried kill me….while my daughter there…he my only enemy….when he lands in UK that's when it starts.' And revelling in his life of crime, he told a friend: 'When you have fire in your heart you don't stop. You get addicted. You lose everyone. You turn cold, no emotions.' Rothwell was arrested by Spanish police in 2020, with video footage showing him dancing a bizarre jig after being led away. He was jailed for 43 years at Manchester Crown Court last week. He had earlier pleaded guilty to a raft of firearms and drugs charges, alongside conspiracy to cause grievous bodily harm with intent. Nine associates were jailed for a combined 163 years and 11 months. Another kingpin hauled back to Britain using EncroChat evidence was James Harding, who ran a vast £100million cocaine empire alongside his 'loyal right-hand man', Jayes Kharouti, 39. The 34-year-old, who claimed to be a high-end watch sales executive, was living in luxury at the The Nest apartment complex in Al Barari, Dubai, staying in five-star hotels and driving Bugatti and Lamborghini sports cars. But messages showed him trying to recruit a hitman to put an unnamed rival courier 'permanently out of business', arming him with a gun and ammunition for the 'full M', meaning murder. The pair were also shown to be behind a vast cocaine smuggling operation that brought a metric tonne of cocaine into the UK and generated £5m in profit in just 10 weeks. Like Rothwell, Harding openly identified himself in a series of preening selfies he sent on the same phone he used to arrange his hit. He even used his EncroChat handle to book a table for his family at the Nusr et Steakhouse in Dubai - the creation of Internet personality Nusret Gökçe, better known as 'Salt Bae'. Harding was arrested in Switzerland before being brought by private jet to London, where he was met by armed officers. His Old Bailey trial was also held under tight security before he was jailed for life with a minimum term of 32 years in June. Operation Venetic - the name for the UK's response to the EncroChat hack led by the National Crime Agency (NCA) - exposed the shocking violence drug bosses used to protect their turf. Few were more sadistic than Liverpool's hated Huyton Firm, led by lifelong gangster Vincent Coggins - supported by his savage enforcer, Paul Woodford. EncroChat messages showed Coggins and Woodford discussing their plans to murder the men they believed responsible for a 2020 raid on a house they were using to hide drugs. Coggins messaged Woodford to say he was planning to use a 'pineapple' (hand grenade) on the men, to which he replied: 'I kill him with u m8'. In another exchange, Woodford asked Coggins if he should buy a 'belter', meaning a gun. Coggins replied with: 'M8 just bought load more, we cool for tools'. Coggins went on to be jailed for 28 years for drug trafficking and blackmail, while Woodford received 24 years and six months. Vincent's brother, Francis, was arrested by police in the Netherlands earlier this year after a five-year manhunt. The ability of police to lift the lid on a previously hidden world allowed them to gather evidence to prosecute kingpins previously considered 'untouchable'. These included Jamie 'the Iceman' Stevenson, who spent decades as one of the UK's most notorious gangsters and was once accused of murdering fellow gangster Tony McGovern, the best man at his wedding. Stevenson originally rose up through the Glasgow underworld in the 1990s and became close friends with McGovern, whose family ran the so-called McGovernment mob in the north of the city. However, the pair would later fall out amid a vicious power struggle and Stevenson narrowly survived a botched attempt on his life. In 2000, McGovern himself died in an assassination that many blamed on his former friend - although the charges against him were dropped. The moment that would lead to Stevenson's final downfall came on Valentine's Day 2020, when the gangster was unwittingly caught in a police surveillance operation in Spain. Officers had been watching the bar of Alicante's four-star Melia Hotel after the arrival of David Bilsland, a Glaswegian fruit seller accused of smuggling drugs. Spanish officers tipped off by their British counterparts sent surveillance images of the meeting back to Scotland. But when photographs from the Alicante bar arrived in Scotland, investigators were stunned to see the man Bisland had been meeting was Stevenson, then one of the UK's most wanted criminals. In a T-shirt and jeans the gangster, once the key suspect in a murder case involving his own best man, was confident he passed off as just another British tourist - and completely unaware he was under surveillance. The summit was the beginning of the end for Stevenson. Until then detectives had had no idea where he was after he fled the country on police bail. They later used EncroChat messages to link Stevenson to a plot to use Bisland's Glasgow fruit business to smuggle £100m worth of cocaine into Glasgow inside boxes of bananas. Deputy Crown agent Kenny Donnelly, from the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, said the messages made it clear Stevenson had 'directed the group' and he is now serving a 20 year sentence.


Reuters
7 hours ago
- Reuters
Trump administration imposes new sanctions on four ICC judges, prosecutors
WASHINGTON/THE HAGUE, Aug 20 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump's administration on Wednesday imposed sanctions on two judges and two prosecutors at the International Criminal Court, as Washington ramped up its pressure on the war tribunal over its targeting of Israeli leaders and a past decision to investigate U.S. officials. In a statement, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio called the court "a national security threat that has been an instrument for lawfare" against the United States and Israel. Washington designated Nicolas Yann Guillou of France, Nazhat Shameem Khan of Fiji, Mame Mandiaye Niang of Senegal, and Kimberly Prost of Canada, according to the U.S. Treasury and State Department. All officials have been involved in cases linked to Israel and the United States. "United States has been clear and steadfast in our opposition to the ICC's politicization, abuse of power, disregard for our national sovereignty, and illegitimate judicial overreach," Rubio said. The second round of sanctions comes less than three months after the administration took the unprecedented step of slapping sanctions on four separate ICC judges. It represents a serious escalation that will likely impede the functioning of the court and the prosecutor's office as they deal with major cases, including war crime allegations against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine. ICC, which had slammed the move in June as an attempt to undermine the independence of the judicial institution, and the office of the prosecutor, did not have immediate comment. ICC judges issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, former Israeli defense chief Yoav Gallant, and Hamas leader Ibrahim al-Masri last November for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity during the Gaza conflict. In March 2020, prosecutors opened an investigation in Afghanistan that included looking into possible crimes by U.S. troops, but since 2021, it has deprioritized the role of the U.S. and focused on alleged crimes committed by the Afghan government and the Taliban forces. The ICC, which was established in 2002, has international jurisdiction to prosecute genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes in member states or if a situation is referred by the U.N. Security Council. Although the ICC has jurisdiction over war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in its 125 member countries, some nations, including the U.S., China, Russia, and Israel, do not recognise its authority. It has high-profile war crimes investigations under way into the Israel-Hamas conflict and Russia's war in Ukraine, as well as in Sudan, Myanmar, the Philippines, and Venezuela. The sanctions freeze any U.S. assets the individuals may have and essentially cut them off from the U.S. financial system. Guillou is an ICC judge who presided over a pre-trial panel that issued the arrest warrant for Netanyahu. Khan and Niang are the court's two deputy prosecutors. Netanyahu's office issued a statement welcoming the U.S. sanctions. Canadian Judge Kimberly Prost served on an ICC appeals chamber that, in March 2020, unanimously authorized the ICC prosecutor to investigate alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in Afghanistan since 2003, including examining the role of U.S. service members. Global Affairs Canada and the office of Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the ICC sanctions, including against Prost. The Trump administration's dislike of the court goes back to his first term. In 2020, Washington imposed sanctions on then-prosecutor Fatou Bensouda and one of her top aides over the court's work on Afghanistan.


Reuters
13 hours ago
- Reuters
US trans woman challenges Dutch asylum rejection
AMSTERDAM, Aug 20 (Reuters) - A 28-year-old transgender woman from the U.S. began a legal challenge on Wednesday to the rejection of her asylum application in the Netherlands where she had sought political asylum saying she no longer felt safe in the United States. Veronica Clifford-Carlos, a visual artist from California, came to the Netherlands - the first country to legalise same-sex marriage and known for its strong protections of LGBT rights - because the Trump administration's policies towards transgender people made her feel unsafe, her lawyer's office said. The case, the first of its kind in the Netherlands, will be heard in a court in Amsterdam starting Wednesday, with a ruling expected in four to six weeks. Since taking office in January, President Donald Trump has issued executive orders limiting transgender rights, banned transgender people from serving in the armed forces, and rescinded anti-discrimination policies for LGBTQ+ people. Dutch advocacy group LGBT Asylum Support, which backs the lawsuit, is currently assisting around 20 U.S. trans individuals with pending asylum claims. According to data from the Immigration and Naturalisation Service (IND), 29 Americans applied for asylum in the Netherlands during the first half of this year. In previous years there were between nine and 18 applicants per year, an IND spokesperson said. "The IND generally states that discrimination by authorities and fellow citizens can be considered an act of persecution if it is so severe that victims can no longer function socially and societally," LGBT Asylum Support said in a statement. "But the IND maintains that there are no grounds for exceptional treatment of transgender and queer refugees from the U.S."