On the night of February 27, 1933, the German parliament building burned. Dutch communist Marinus van der Lubbe was arrested at the scene, convicted, and executed. Hitler's government used the fire within twenty-four hours to push through the Reichstag Fire Decree, suspending civil liberties and enabling mass arrests of Communist Party members. Historians have debated for ninety years whether van der Lubbe acted alone or whether the Nazis orchestrated or facilitated the fire. The majority modern view — supported by Fritz Tobias (1962), revived by Benjamin Carter Hett (2014), and confirmed by a 2008 German Federal Court reversal of van der Lubbe's conviction — is that the evidence for Nazi orchestration remains contested but the exploitation of the fire by Hitler is thoroughly documented.