In early 1929 the police began to accumulate evidence of theft, fraud, and bribery against two high-profile Eastern European Jews, Leo and Willy Sklarek, who owned a textile firm in Berlin that supplied the city with uniforms and other equipment. Classical parvenus, the Sklareks lived in palatial West End villas, drove fancy cars, kept a stable of ponies at the track, and, to ensure a certain freedom in their business dealings, greased the palms of local officials. Apparently they did not spread their bribes quite widely enough, however, for the police eventually arrested them for trafficking in stolen goods. In assembling a case against them, the prosecutors discovered that the brothers had sent Mayor Böss a fur coat for his wife without including a bill. To his credit, the mayor had repeatedly offered to pay for the coat and was eventually billed for 375 marks, which he knew was far too low. He therefore sent the Sklareks an additional payment of 1000 marks, asking that they use the money to buy a painting for his beloved city museum. They did so, but since the actual cost of the coat was 4,950 marks the mayor still seemed to have turned the kind of deal not available to nonofficeholders. When the matter became public in September 1929, all the factions that had long opposed Böss’s liberal policies seized upon this issue to vilify him. The Communists called him a typical capitalist crook, while Goebbels’s
Mayor Böss’s political career was not the only casualty in this affair. The Prussian Landtag conducted an investigation that treated the case as another example of “Berlin corruption,” thus reinforcing images of the city as one big sleeze-factory—
The Weimar Republic suffered another blow on October 3, 1929, with the sudden death of Foreign Minister Gustav Stresemann, architect of the policy of reconciliation between Germany and the Western powers. His last service was the negotiation and ratification of the Young Plan, by which Germany reduced its reparations payments. For this he was reviled by the far right, which rejected reparations payments in principle. In Berlin it was widely understood that his death was a tragedy not just for the nation but for the capital. His funeral was attended by hundreds of thousands of mourners, the largest such turnout since the death of Ebert. Kessler, learning of his friend’s demise while on a trip to Paris, mused in his diary: “It is an irreparable loss whose consequences cannot be foreseen. . . . What I fear, as a result of Stresemann’s death, are very grave political consequences at home, with a move to the right by [Stresemann’s] People’s Party, a break-up of the coalition, and the facilitation of efforts to establish a dictatorship.”