Görnnert joined the Nazi Party in 1931 while still a student (membership number 411,588).[2] He joined the Sturmabteilung (SA) in 1933, eventually attaining the rank of SA-Brigadeführer.[3] After his studies, he worked as an instructor at the SA-Reichsführerschule (SA Reich Leadership School).[4] He entered the Reich Aviation Ministry in January 1937, where he became a personal adjutant to ReichsministerHermann Göring. During the Second World War, he joined the Luftwaffe on 1 April 1940 where he attained the rank of Oberst. At that time, he also was named as a Ministerialrat (ministerial councilor) in the ministry, advancing to Ministerialdirigent (ministerial conductor) on 1 January 1944.[5] He was made an honorary citizen of the Karlsruhe Technical University in 1941.[6] Toward the end of the war, with the Red Army approaching Göring's Carinhall country estate northeast of Berlin, Görnnert was placed in charge of evacuating much of Göring's looted artworks aboard a special train headed to Berchtesgaden but which was diverted to Veldenstein Castle [de], Göring's residence in Neuhaus an der Pegnitz near Nuremberg.[7]
^Rüdiger Hachtmann: Wissenschaftsmanagement im "Dritten Reich", Band 2, Wallstein-Verl., Göttingen 2007, p. 867 ISBN978-3-8353-0108-5.
^The Nuremberg Medical Trial, 1946/47: Transcripts, Material of the Prosecution and Defense, Related Documents: Guide to the Microfiche-edition, Volume 2. K.G. Saur, 1999, p. 213. ISBN978-3-598-32154-2
^Helmut Heiber: Universität unterm Hakenkreuz, Teil 2: Die Kapitulation der Hohen Schulen: das Jahr 1933 und seine Themen, München 1994, p. 62, ISBN3-598-22631-4.
^Helmut Maier: Forschung als Waffe: Rüstungsforschung in der Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gesellschaft und das Kaiser-Wilhelm-institut für Metallforschung 1900–1945/48 (Band 16, Teile 1–2), Wallstein, 2007, p. 729f. ISBN978-3-8353-0109-2
^ abErnst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war was vor und nach 1945, Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verlag, Frankfurt-am-Main, 2007, p. 191, ISBN978-3-596-16048-8.
^Kenneth D. Alford: Nazi Plunder: Great Treasure Stories Of World War II. DaCapo Press, 2003, pp. 29–30, ISBN978-0-306-81241-5.
^Der Nürnberger Ärzteprozeß 1946/47. Wortprotokolle, Anklage- und Verteidigungsmaterial, Quellen zum Umfeld. Erschließungsband zur Mikrofiche-Edition. Im Auftrag der Hamburger Stiftung Sozialgeschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts. Deutsche Ausgabe, Mikrofiche-Edition, München 2000, S. 97