The eighth transport from Beuthen allegedly went to Olkusz, as indicated in the handwritten note under the heading "Liste 8" ("ab Ilkenau"). The Gestapo entry specifies that 151 Jews from 24 so-called Jew Houses in Beuthen were deported (Bäckerstraße 2, Bismarckstraße 7, Friedrich-Wilhelm-Ring 6, 7, 9, 10, 11 and 15, Gartenstraße 20, Günther Wolfstraße 4, Hohenzollernstraße 14, Kirchstraße 3 and 5, Krakauerstraße 1, Langestraße 4, Poststraße 56, Ritterstraße 2,3, 5 and 7, Schneiderstraße 2, Tarnowitzerstraße 3 and 33, and Wallstraße 25). The first deportation from Olkusz occured on April 20 (140 people) and the first major transport with 1,000 deportees during the Shavuot festival on May 21 to May 23. On June 10, the Germans started to liquidate the ghetto. On Shabbat, June 13, Jews from the small neighboring towns and villages were brought to Olkusz and herded to a small square vis-a-vis the National Health Service's building. They were subsequently deported with people from the ghetto the very same day as well as on Monday, June 15. Thus, the Beuthen Jews very likely joined - possibly together with the two deportees from Gleiwitz (Rosa Brauer and Gertrud Aronheim) - the Jews from Olkusz county and were then deported further, either to the north east via Kielce into the Lublin District or to Auschwitz. Martin Gilbert even suggests that they were deported to Belzec. However, this seems less likely since the transports to Belzec paused between mid-April and August 1942 due to construction work at the new gas chambers.
The further destiny of the Beuthen Jews deported on June 15 is not known. Apparently nobody survived.