After the femme murder of Maria Sandmayr in 1920, Ernst Ludwig Fischler von Treuberg was questioned as a witness. This landowner at Holzen Castle was a cousin of Ernst Fischler von Treuberg from Murnau. "I actually own two heavy guns with carriages and wagons at Holzen Castle, around 100 infantry rifles with around 6 wagons of ammunition for the heavy guns. I do not own any infantry ammunition. I then agreed with Gauhauptmann Fischer that the latter would collect around 130 rifles, which happened immediately." As part of the investigation into the murder of Maria Sandmayr, Hermann Kriebel, who had been responsible for organizing the local defense force, was also questioned in 1924. At this time, Kriebel was in Landsberg am Lech prison as a convicted participant in the Hitler putsch. He has no regrets: he supports the murder of Maria Sandmayr as well as that of Karl Gareis, who was killed in Munich in 1921. [It is known] "that the enemy disarmament commission had a huge number of volunteers from degenerate German circles at its disposal, who, disregarding all patriotic duty and decency, committed open treason and betrayed hidden weapons in the possession of the residents' corps, the Reichswehr and the state police to the enemy Entente commission. The bitterness against these scoundrels [sic] was and still is very great in wide circles. [...] In contrast to the other German states, Bavaria succeeded in purifying the atmosphere and reducing the number of betrayals to the Entente commission to a much lower level. […] If the young people whose names were given to me really did get rid of two such scoundrels, then that was an act that caused general satisfaction back in 1920, even if it is quite clear that the letter of the law is different. I myself, and certainly 99% of the 300,000 local militia members, approved of the course of action and still approve of it today.” The Munich writer Lion Feuchtwanger takes up the case in his book “Success”. Maria Sandmayr is called Amalia Sandhuber in his book. The work is a roman à clef about politics and society in Munich and Bavaria. The NSDAP naturally also plays a role in it. Feuchtwanger does not use the word NSDAP, but ironically refers to the party as “Truly Germans”. “The maid Amalia Sandhuber was born in the country, not far from Munich, the daughter of a small cottager. […] The word traitor was popular in True German circles. One of their romantic articles was: Traitors are subject to the Feme. The Feme was an institution of the German Middle Ages, an association that wanted, without much effect, to replace the cumbersome official jurisdiction with a quicker, more popular one. The patriotic movement revived this institution, but reinterpreted it along the lines of certain Indian and boy books, turning it into a romantically sinister institution that eliminated all those who were not to its liking on the orders of vague superiors. Several hundred people met their end through this sinister jurisdiction of the True Germans. Some of the patriots now suspected the maid Amalia Sandhuber of being responsible for the treason in the general's house. When, after a meeting with the general, a secret weapons depot was denounced to the authorities, so that the patriots' confidants in the police could hardly save the weapons for the party in time, the Feme summarily sentenced the housekeeper Amalia Sandhuber to death."