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The Nuremberg Trials

     Held for the purpose of bringing Nazi war criminals to justice, the Nuremberg trials were
     a series of 13 trials carried out in Nuremberg, Germany, between 1945 and 1949. The
     defendants, who included Nazi Party officials and high-ranking military officers along with
     German industrialists, lawyers and doctors, were indicted on such charges as crimes
     against peace and crimes against humanity. Nazi leader Adolf Hitler (1889-1945)
     committed suicide and was never brought to trial. Although the legal justifications for the
     trials and their procedural innovations were controversial at the time, the Nuremberg
     trials are now regarded as a milestone toward the establishment of a permanent
     international court, and an important precedent for dealing with later instances of
     genocide and other crimes against humanity.


                                                      the defendants and prevent later accusations
                                                      that the defendants had been condemned
The Road to the Nuremberg Trials                      without evidence.

Shortly after Adolf Hitler came to power as           There were many legal and procedural
chancellor of Germany in 1933, he and his             difficulties to overcome in setting up the
Nazi government began implementing policies           Nuremberg trials. First, there was no
designed to persecute German-Jewish people            precedent for an international trial of war
and other perceived enemies of the Nazi               criminals. There were earlier instances of
state. Over the next decade, these policies           prosecution for war crimes, such as the
grew increasingly repressive and violent and          execution of Confederate army officer Henry
resulted, by the end of World War II (1939-           Wirz (1823-65) for his maltreatment of Union
45), in the systematic, state-sponsored               prisoners of war during the American Civil
murder of some 6 million European Jews                War (1861-65); and the courts-martial held by
(along with an estimated 4 million to 6 million       Turkey in 1919-20 to punish those responsible
non-Jews).                                            for the Armenian genocide of 1915-16.
                                                      However, these were trials conducted
In December 1942, the Allied leaders of Great         according to the laws of a single nation rather
Britain, the United States and the Soviet             than, as in the case of the Nuremberg trials, a
Union "issued the first joint declaration             group of four powers (France, Britain, the
officially noting the mass murder of European         Soviet Union and the U.S.) with different legal
Jewry and resolving to prosecute those                traditions and practices.
responsible for violence against civilian
populations," according to the United States          The Allies eventually established the laws and
Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM).                    procedures for the Nuremberg trials with the
Joseph Stalin (1878-1953), the Soviet leader,         London Charter of the International Military
initially proposed the execution of 50,000 to         Tribunal (IMT), issued on August 8, 1945.
100,000 German staff officers. British Prime          Among other things, the charter defined three
Minister Winston Churchill (1874-1965)                categories of crimes: crimes against peace
discussed the possibility of summary                  (including planning, preparing, starting or
execution (execution without a trial) of high-        waging wars of aggression or wars in violation
ranking Nazis, but was persuaded by                   of international agreements), war crimes
American leaders that a criminal trial would          (including violations of customs or laws of
be more effective. Among other advantages,            war, including improper treatment of civilians
criminal      proceedings    would     require        and prisoners of war) and crimes against
documentation of the crimes charged against           humanity (including murder, enslavement or



                                                                http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/
deportation of civilians or persecution on        of victor's justice--the Allies were applying a
political, religious or racial grounds). It was   harsh standard to crimes committed by
determined that civilian officials as well as     Germans and leniency to crimes committed
military officers could be accused of war         by their own soldiers.
crimes.
                                                  As the accused men and judges spoke four
The city of Nuremberg (also known as              different languages, the trial saw the
Nurnberg) in the German state of Bavaria was      introduction of a technological innovation
selected as the location for the trials because   taken for granted today: instantaneous
its Palace of Justice was relatively undamaged    translation. IBM provided the technology and
i
 by the war and included a large prison area.     recruited men and women from international
Additionally, Nuremberg had been the site of      telephone exchanges to provide on-the-spot
annual Nazi propaganda rallies; holding the       translations through headphones in English,
postwar trials there marked the symbolic end      French, German and Russian.
of Hitler's government, the Third Reich.
                                                  In the end, the international tribunal found all
The Major War Criminals' Trial: 1945-46           but three of the defendants guilty. Twelve
                                                  were sentenced to death, one in absentia, and
The best-known of the Nuremberg trials was        the rest were given prison sentences ranging
the Trial of Major War Criminals, held from       from 10 years to life behind bars. Ten of the
November 20, 1945, to October 1, 1946. The        condemned were executed by hanging on
format of the trial was a mix of legal            October 16, 1946. Hermann Göring (1893-
traditions: There were prosecutors and            1946), Hitler's designated successor and head
defense attorneys according to British and        of the "Luftwaffe" (German air force),
American law, but the decisions and               committed suicide the night before his
sentences were imposed by a tribunal (panel       execution with a cyanide capsule he had
of judges) rather than a single judge and a       hidden in a jar of skin medication.
jury. The chief American prosecutor was
Robert H. Jackson (1892-1954), an associate       Subsequent Trials: 1946-49
justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Each of the
four Allied powers supplied two judges--a         Following the Trial of Major War Criminals,
main judge and an alternate.                      there were 12 additional trials held at
                                                  Nuremberg. These proceedings, lasting from
Twenty-four individuals were indicted, along      December 1946 to April 1949, are grouped
with six Nazi organizations determined to be      together as the Subsequent Nuremberg
criminal (such as the "Gestapo," or secret        Proceedings. They differed from the first trial
state police). One of the indicted men was        in that they were conducted before U.S.
deemed medically unfit to stand trial, while a    military tribunals rather than the international
second man killed himself before the trial        tribunal that decided the fate of the major
began. Hitler and two of his top associates,      Nazi leaders. The reason for the change was
Heinrich Himmler (1900-45) and Joseph             that growing differences among the four
Goebbels (1897-45), had each committed            Allied powers had made other joint trials
suicide in the spring of 1945 before they could   impossible. The subsequent trials were held in
be brought to trial. The defendants were          the same location at the Palace of Justice in
allowed to choose their own lawyers, and the      Nuremberg.
most common defense strategy was that the
crimes defined in the London Charter were         These proceedings included the Doctors Trial
examples of ex post facto law; that is, they      (December 9, 1946-August 20, 1947), in which
were laws that criminalized actions               23 defendants were accused of crimes against
committed before the laws were drafted.           humanity, including medical experiments on
Another defense was that the trial was a form     prisoners of war. In the Judges Trial (March 5-



                                                           http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/
December 4, 1947), 16 lawyers and judges
were charged with furthering the Nazi plan for
                                                           On Nov. 20, 1945, the International Military
racial purity by implementing the eugenics
                                                           Tribunal began proceedings against 22 high-
laws of the Third Reich. Other subsequent
trials dealt with German industrialists accused            ranking Nazis indicted for war crimes; the
of using slave labor and plundering occupied               Nuremberg Trials set a precedent in
countries; high-ranking army officers accused              international human rights law.
of atrocities against prisoners of war; and SS
officers accused of violence against
concentration camp inmates. Of the 185
people indicted in the subsequent Nuremberg       Trials of Nazi War Criminals Begin
trials, 12 defendants received death
sentences, 8 others were given life in prison
and an additional 77 people received prison       At the end of World War II, the Allied powers
terms of varying lengths, according to the        sought to bring those responsible for the
USHMM. Authorities later reduced a number         Holocaust and World War II atrocities to
of the sentences.                                 justice. Low-level offenders were tried by
                                                  court-martial, while Germans who primarily
Aftermath                                         committed crimes in foreign countries would
                                                  be tried in those countries.
The Nuremberg trials were controversial even
among those who wanted the major criminals        The most serious offenders would be tried
punished. Harlan Stone (1872-1946), chief         under the Charter of the International Military
justice of the U.S. Supreme Court at the time,    Tribunal, also known as the London Charter, a
described      the      proceedings     as    a   body of laws drafted by judges from the
"sanctimonious fraud" and a "high-grade           United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union
lynching party." William O. Douglas (1898-        and France in August 1945. The main trials
1980), then an associate U.S. Supreme Court       under the new legislation were held at the
justice, said the Allies "substituted power for   Palace of Justice in Nuremberg, Germany.
principle" at Nuremberg.
                                                  The four Allies divided the workload for the
Nonetheless, most observers considered the        prosecution. The United States handled the
trials a step forward for the establishment of    charges of conspiracy, Britain handled crimes
international law. The findings at Nuremberg      against peace, and France and the Soviet
led directly to the United Nations Genocide       Union shared war crimes and crimes against
Convention (1948) and Universal Declaration       humanity.
of Human Rights (1948), as well as the Geneva
Convention on the Laws and Customs of War         In the first and most famous of the 12 trials at
(1949). In addition, the International Military   Nuremberg, 24 Nazi war criminals were
Tribunal supplied a useful precedent for the      indicted. Industrialist Gustav Krupp was ruled
trials of Japanese war criminals in Tokyo         too ill to face trial and labor leader Robert Ley
(1946-48); the 1961 trial of Nazi leader Adolf    committed suicide before trial. The tribunal
Eichmann (1906-62); and the establishment of      began proceedings against the remaining 22
tribunals for war crimes committed in the         men—including with Hitler’s deputy Martin
former Yugoslavia (1993) and in Rwanda            Bormann, who was tried in absentia—on Nov.
(1994).                                           20, 1945.

                                                  The first day was spent reading the 24,000-
                                                  word indictment against the defendants,
                                                  broadcast through headphones in four
                                                  different languages. The defendants sat
                                                  together in a two-level dock, guarded by a


                                                           http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/
row of white steel-helmeted American               19 Convicted, 12 Sentenced to
military personnel. The following day each
defendant pleaded not guilty and the
                                                   Death
prosecution, headed by U.S. Supreme Court
                                                   Over the next month, the prosecution
Justice Robert Jackson, began its case.
                                                   presented evidence of Nazi atrocities,
                                                   including a film with footage from
“The privilege of opening the first trial in
                                                   concentration camps and the Warsaw ghetto.
history for crimes against the peace of the
                                                   In a 1992 interview, interrogator Henry
world imposes a grave responsibility,” Jackson
                                                   Kellermann, a Jew who emigrated from
began. “The wrongs which we seek to
                                                   Germany 1937, spoke of the defendants’
condemn and punish have been so calculated,
                                                   reactions to the film.
so malignant, and so devastating, that
civilization cannot tolerate their being
                                                   “It was amazing how they fell apart,” he said.
ignored, because it cannot survive their being
                                                   “[Hermann] Goering never looked at it,
repeated. That four great nations, flushed
                                                   neither did [Rudolf] Hess. [Hans] Frank, the
with victory and stung with injury, stay the
                                                   ‘Butcher of Poland,’ broke into tears.”
hand of vengeance and voluntarily submit
their captive enemies to the judgment of the
                                                   The prosecution began their cases against
law is one of the most significant tributes that
                                                   each individual defendant in January and,
Power has ever paid to Reason.”
                                                   from March to June, most of the defendants
                                                   would testify. Final statements were made
The Defendants                                     Aug. 31 and the justices reached their verdicts
                                                   on Oct. 1.
Many of the men most responsible for the
atrocities under the Third Reich, including        Twelve of the defendants were sentenced to
Chancellor Adolf Hitler, SS head Heinrich          death, including Bormann. Seven were given
Himmler and propaganda minister Joseph             prison sentences and three were acquitted.
Goebbels, had committed suicide to avoid           Goering evaded the hangman by swallowing a
being captured.                                    poison capsule the day before his scheduled
                                                   execution.
The 24 men chosen to face trial included
Deputy Fuhrer Rudolph Hess, Hans Frank, the
“Butcher of Poland,” Foreign Minister Joachim
von Ribbentrop, and Hermann Goering, the
former head of the Luftwaffe, president of the     i
                                                    Taken from
Reichstag and Hitler’s chosen successor.           1. http://www.history.com/topics/nuremberg-
                                                   trials
Goering held no remorse for his actions and
thought he committed no crimes. His                2. http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news/on-this-
testimony was one of the most well-known           day/November/Nuremberg-Trials-Begin.html#2
moments of the trial; “Göring obviously
                                                   3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_Trials
enjoyed himself as he kept the courtroom
spellbound for days,” wrote Life magazine.
“Göring was anxious, whatever his fate, that
history record him as an important world
figure and as a German hero.”




                                                            http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/

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Nuremberg Trials Set Precedent for Human Rights

  • 1. The Nuremberg Trials Held for the purpose of bringing Nazi war criminals to justice, the Nuremberg trials were a series of 13 trials carried out in Nuremberg, Germany, between 1945 and 1949. The defendants, who included Nazi Party officials and high-ranking military officers along with German industrialists, lawyers and doctors, were indicted on such charges as crimes against peace and crimes against humanity. Nazi leader Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) committed suicide and was never brought to trial. Although the legal justifications for the trials and their procedural innovations were controversial at the time, the Nuremberg trials are now regarded as a milestone toward the establishment of a permanent international court, and an important precedent for dealing with later instances of genocide and other crimes against humanity. the defendants and prevent later accusations that the defendants had been condemned The Road to the Nuremberg Trials without evidence. Shortly after Adolf Hitler came to power as There were many legal and procedural chancellor of Germany in 1933, he and his difficulties to overcome in setting up the Nazi government began implementing policies Nuremberg trials. First, there was no designed to persecute German-Jewish people precedent for an international trial of war and other perceived enemies of the Nazi criminals. There were earlier instances of state. Over the next decade, these policies prosecution for war crimes, such as the grew increasingly repressive and violent and execution of Confederate army officer Henry resulted, by the end of World War II (1939- Wirz (1823-65) for his maltreatment of Union 45), in the systematic, state-sponsored prisoners of war during the American Civil murder of some 6 million European Jews War (1861-65); and the courts-martial held by (along with an estimated 4 million to 6 million Turkey in 1919-20 to punish those responsible non-Jews). for the Armenian genocide of 1915-16. However, these were trials conducted In December 1942, the Allied leaders of Great according to the laws of a single nation rather Britain, the United States and the Soviet than, as in the case of the Nuremberg trials, a Union "issued the first joint declaration group of four powers (France, Britain, the officially noting the mass murder of European Soviet Union and the U.S.) with different legal Jewry and resolving to prosecute those traditions and practices. responsible for violence against civilian populations," according to the United States The Allies eventually established the laws and Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). procedures for the Nuremberg trials with the Joseph Stalin (1878-1953), the Soviet leader, London Charter of the International Military initially proposed the execution of 50,000 to Tribunal (IMT), issued on August 8, 1945. 100,000 German staff officers. British Prime Among other things, the charter defined three Minister Winston Churchill (1874-1965) categories of crimes: crimes against peace discussed the possibility of summary (including planning, preparing, starting or execution (execution without a trial) of high- waging wars of aggression or wars in violation ranking Nazis, but was persuaded by of international agreements), war crimes American leaders that a criminal trial would (including violations of customs or laws of be more effective. Among other advantages, war, including improper treatment of civilians criminal proceedings would require and prisoners of war) and crimes against documentation of the crimes charged against humanity (including murder, enslavement or http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/
  • 2. deportation of civilians or persecution on of victor's justice--the Allies were applying a political, religious or racial grounds). It was harsh standard to crimes committed by determined that civilian officials as well as Germans and leniency to crimes committed military officers could be accused of war by their own soldiers. crimes. As the accused men and judges spoke four The city of Nuremberg (also known as different languages, the trial saw the Nurnberg) in the German state of Bavaria was introduction of a technological innovation selected as the location for the trials because taken for granted today: instantaneous its Palace of Justice was relatively undamaged translation. IBM provided the technology and i by the war and included a large prison area. recruited men and women from international Additionally, Nuremberg had been the site of telephone exchanges to provide on-the-spot annual Nazi propaganda rallies; holding the translations through headphones in English, postwar trials there marked the symbolic end French, German and Russian. of Hitler's government, the Third Reich. In the end, the international tribunal found all The Major War Criminals' Trial: 1945-46 but three of the defendants guilty. Twelve were sentenced to death, one in absentia, and The best-known of the Nuremberg trials was the rest were given prison sentences ranging the Trial of Major War Criminals, held from from 10 years to life behind bars. Ten of the November 20, 1945, to October 1, 1946. The condemned were executed by hanging on format of the trial was a mix of legal October 16, 1946. Hermann Göring (1893- traditions: There were prosecutors and 1946), Hitler's designated successor and head defense attorneys according to British and of the "Luftwaffe" (German air force), American law, but the decisions and committed suicide the night before his sentences were imposed by a tribunal (panel execution with a cyanide capsule he had of judges) rather than a single judge and a hidden in a jar of skin medication. jury. The chief American prosecutor was Robert H. Jackson (1892-1954), an associate Subsequent Trials: 1946-49 justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Each of the four Allied powers supplied two judges--a Following the Trial of Major War Criminals, main judge and an alternate. there were 12 additional trials held at Nuremberg. These proceedings, lasting from Twenty-four individuals were indicted, along December 1946 to April 1949, are grouped with six Nazi organizations determined to be together as the Subsequent Nuremberg criminal (such as the "Gestapo," or secret Proceedings. They differed from the first trial state police). One of the indicted men was in that they were conducted before U.S. deemed medically unfit to stand trial, while a military tribunals rather than the international second man killed himself before the trial tribunal that decided the fate of the major began. Hitler and two of his top associates, Nazi leaders. The reason for the change was Heinrich Himmler (1900-45) and Joseph that growing differences among the four Goebbels (1897-45), had each committed Allied powers had made other joint trials suicide in the spring of 1945 before they could impossible. The subsequent trials were held in be brought to trial. The defendants were the same location at the Palace of Justice in allowed to choose their own lawyers, and the Nuremberg. most common defense strategy was that the crimes defined in the London Charter were These proceedings included the Doctors Trial examples of ex post facto law; that is, they (December 9, 1946-August 20, 1947), in which were laws that criminalized actions 23 defendants were accused of crimes against committed before the laws were drafted. humanity, including medical experiments on Another defense was that the trial was a form prisoners of war. In the Judges Trial (March 5- http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/
  • 3. December 4, 1947), 16 lawyers and judges were charged with furthering the Nazi plan for On Nov. 20, 1945, the International Military racial purity by implementing the eugenics Tribunal began proceedings against 22 high- laws of the Third Reich. Other subsequent trials dealt with German industrialists accused ranking Nazis indicted for war crimes; the of using slave labor and plundering occupied Nuremberg Trials set a precedent in countries; high-ranking army officers accused international human rights law. of atrocities against prisoners of war; and SS officers accused of violence against concentration camp inmates. Of the 185 people indicted in the subsequent Nuremberg Trials of Nazi War Criminals Begin trials, 12 defendants received death sentences, 8 others were given life in prison and an additional 77 people received prison At the end of World War II, the Allied powers terms of varying lengths, according to the sought to bring those responsible for the USHMM. Authorities later reduced a number Holocaust and World War II atrocities to of the sentences. justice. Low-level offenders were tried by court-martial, while Germans who primarily Aftermath committed crimes in foreign countries would be tried in those countries. The Nuremberg trials were controversial even among those who wanted the major criminals The most serious offenders would be tried punished. Harlan Stone (1872-1946), chief under the Charter of the International Military justice of the U.S. Supreme Court at the time, Tribunal, also known as the London Charter, a described the proceedings as a body of laws drafted by judges from the "sanctimonious fraud" and a "high-grade United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union lynching party." William O. Douglas (1898- and France in August 1945. The main trials 1980), then an associate U.S. Supreme Court under the new legislation were held at the justice, said the Allies "substituted power for Palace of Justice in Nuremberg, Germany. principle" at Nuremberg. The four Allies divided the workload for the Nonetheless, most observers considered the prosecution. The United States handled the trials a step forward for the establishment of charges of conspiracy, Britain handled crimes international law. The findings at Nuremberg against peace, and France and the Soviet led directly to the United Nations Genocide Union shared war crimes and crimes against Convention (1948) and Universal Declaration humanity. of Human Rights (1948), as well as the Geneva Convention on the Laws and Customs of War In the first and most famous of the 12 trials at (1949). In addition, the International Military Nuremberg, 24 Nazi war criminals were Tribunal supplied a useful precedent for the indicted. Industrialist Gustav Krupp was ruled trials of Japanese war criminals in Tokyo too ill to face trial and labor leader Robert Ley (1946-48); the 1961 trial of Nazi leader Adolf committed suicide before trial. The tribunal Eichmann (1906-62); and the establishment of began proceedings against the remaining 22 tribunals for war crimes committed in the men—including with Hitler’s deputy Martin former Yugoslavia (1993) and in Rwanda Bormann, who was tried in absentia—on Nov. (1994). 20, 1945. The first day was spent reading the 24,000- word indictment against the defendants, broadcast through headphones in four different languages. The defendants sat together in a two-level dock, guarded by a http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/
  • 4. row of white steel-helmeted American 19 Convicted, 12 Sentenced to military personnel. The following day each defendant pleaded not guilty and the Death prosecution, headed by U.S. Supreme Court Over the next month, the prosecution Justice Robert Jackson, began its case. presented evidence of Nazi atrocities, including a film with footage from “The privilege of opening the first trial in concentration camps and the Warsaw ghetto. history for crimes against the peace of the In a 1992 interview, interrogator Henry world imposes a grave responsibility,” Jackson Kellermann, a Jew who emigrated from began. “The wrongs which we seek to Germany 1937, spoke of the defendants’ condemn and punish have been so calculated, reactions to the film. so malignant, and so devastating, that civilization cannot tolerate their being “It was amazing how they fell apart,” he said. ignored, because it cannot survive their being “[Hermann] Goering never looked at it, repeated. That four great nations, flushed neither did [Rudolf] Hess. [Hans] Frank, the with victory and stung with injury, stay the ‘Butcher of Poland,’ broke into tears.” hand of vengeance and voluntarily submit their captive enemies to the judgment of the The prosecution began their cases against law is one of the most significant tributes that each individual defendant in January and, Power has ever paid to Reason.” from March to June, most of the defendants would testify. Final statements were made The Defendants Aug. 31 and the justices reached their verdicts on Oct. 1. Many of the men most responsible for the atrocities under the Third Reich, including Twelve of the defendants were sentenced to Chancellor Adolf Hitler, SS head Heinrich death, including Bormann. Seven were given Himmler and propaganda minister Joseph prison sentences and three were acquitted. Goebbels, had committed suicide to avoid Goering evaded the hangman by swallowing a being captured. poison capsule the day before his scheduled execution. The 24 men chosen to face trial included Deputy Fuhrer Rudolph Hess, Hans Frank, the “Butcher of Poland,” Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, and Hermann Goering, the former head of the Luftwaffe, president of the i Taken from Reichstag and Hitler’s chosen successor. 1. http://www.history.com/topics/nuremberg- trials Goering held no remorse for his actions and thought he committed no crimes. His 2. http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news/on-this- testimony was one of the most well-known day/November/Nuremberg-Trials-Begin.html#2 moments of the trial; “Göring obviously 3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_Trials enjoyed himself as he kept the courtroom spellbound for days,” wrote Life magazine. “Göring was anxious, whatever his fate, that history record him as an important world figure and as a German hero.” http://www.myclinicalresearchbook.blogspot.com/