Hitler and several members of his staff fell ill after dining at the revered Hotel Kaiserhof in Berlin.
Poisoning was suspected, but no arrests were made. Hitler himself seemed least affected by the alleged poisoning, possibly due to his vegetarian diet.[3]
February 9,
Berlin
Ludwig Aßner[DE]
Ludwig Aßner, a German politician and member of the Bavarian State Parliament, sent a poisoned letter to Hitler from France.
An acquaintance of Aßner warned Hitler and the letter was intercepted.[3]
Berlin
Beppo Römer
Freikorps member Beppo Römer vowed to assassinate Hitler as revenge for the Night of the Long Knives but was turned over to the Gestapo before any concrete plan could be made.[4] He was imprisoned at Dachau until Römer was arrested once again for anti-Nazi activities and eventually executed at Brandenbu