During the opening scene, Lutze is wearing a hat which he places on the front desk of the hotel. When he leaves, he does not take his hat and is not seen wearing it for the rest of the episode.
The covering of the barracks window changes position from the time Lutze first enters and the second time he enters and tears the covering off of the window.
The scene when Alfred Becker sentences Captain Lutze begins with Lutze hugging a hanging post in the courtyard. Lutze's left sleeve is covered with straw. When the camera cuts to a wide shot of him sprinting from the post, his sleeve has very little straw on it. As the camera cuts continue, his suit coat loses and gains straw although he does not roll on the ground.
This episode was set in 1962, 17 years after the end of the war and Dachau is shown as abandoned. However, after the war it remained open, first as a prison and then as a refugee camp until the mid-1960s.
The Dachau camp is shown with a solid (masonry) wall and two-story prisoner barracks. In fact, the camp was surrounded by a barbed-wire fence and the barracks were one story.
The prisoner barracks are shown to have masonry-type walls. In fact, the one-story barracks were constructed of wood, inside and out. Also, there were no trees in the interior of Dachau. The area, was flat and devoid of vegetation. Trees would have obstructed the view from the watch towers and possibly offered a means of escape, especially the ones close to the surrounding barbed-wire fence.
The Dachau concentration camp is said to be "up" on a hill. In fact the camp site is on the low flat ground east of the town.
When Captain Lutze enters the first abandoned building inside Dachau, a portrait of Adolf Hitler still hangs on the wall after 17 years. Following World War II, everything Nazi related, especially likenesses of Hitler, were destroyed or hidden. Even today, decades later, Hitler images in Germany on display at historical sites and museums are oftentimes defaced by visitors.
When Capt Lutze first checks into the hotel, and is asking about the camp, he taps his cigarette the wrong way. Any smoker knows you tap the mouth end to "pack" the tobacco. Not the lit end, which would loosen it up.
At 6:25 between the lines, "Detention" and "Yes I remember you" a crew member can be seen crouching down in the reflection of the window of the detention center. This happens again at 6:35 in the close up; likely the same shot used again with zoom.