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Displaying items 941 to 960 of 2,734
  1. Defendants read statements during Pohl case

    (Munich 632) War Crimes Trials - Subsequent Trial Proceedings, Case 4 (Pohl Case), Nuremberg, Germany, September 22, 1947. HS, Judges bench. Chief Justice Robert M. Toms declares that the Tribunal is ready to hear the statements of the defendants. Defendants Oswald Pohl, August Frank, Heinz Karl Fanslau, George Loerner, Erwin Tschentscher, and Rudolf Scheide read their statements to the court. Karl Sommer and Hermann Pook read their statements.

  2. Landsberg Hangings

    (Munich 193) Landsberg (Dachau) Hangings, Landsberg, Germany, May 1946. Coverage of the military hangings of Becher, Lippman, Temple, Hintermeyer, Knoll, Eicheldorfer, Boettger, Kick, Weiss, and Wagner.

  3. List of persons accused or suspected of crimes against humanity and KZ Sachsenhausen documents. (Includes photographs.)

    Booklets: One, "Preliminary List of Persons Accused or Suspected of Crimes Against Humanity," issued by Nehemiah Robinson and the World Jewish Congress in 1961. Other item, titled "KZ Sachsenhausen," is a 156-page booklet compiled by Zentralstelle of Nordrhein-Westfalen in 1961, containing a list with photographs of individuals identified as having worked on prison staff at Sachsenhausen, to help in investigation and capture of remaining war criminals from there, circa 1962.

  4. War Crimes Trials: Malmedy

    (Munich 164) Malmedy War Crimes Trials, Dachau, Germany, May 16, 1946. LS, courtroom, a prosecutor reads indictment. LS, prisoners filing into courtroom and taking their seats. Members of the Tribunal take their places. MLS, four unidentified judges at bench. Brig Gen Josiah T. Dalbey reading part of the indictment. Capt Benjamin N Narvid, defense counselor, speaking to the court, prisoners in BG. Pan, LS, spectators and prisoners take their seats. LSs, Court personnel and spectators rise as judges enter. LS, prosecution starts its case. Defendants in prisoners' dock.

  5. War Crimes Trials: Milch Case

    (Munich 669) War Crimes Trials - Subsequent Trial Proceedings, Case 2 (Milch Case), Nuremberg, Germany. Off-screen voice of unidentified attorney addressing the court in German. The defendants (German generals of the High Command) filing into the courtroom. MLS, the Tribunal. Chief Justice making the opening speech. Brig. Gen. Telford Taylor, the chief prosecutor, reading the indictment against the defendants.

  6. War crimes files decoding book (RG 338)

    Contains a reference work created by the 7707 th War Crimes Group, Judge Advocate General, European Theater of Operations, to locate the geographic area and disposition of war crimes case files compiled by the units of the Judge Advocate General.

  7. War Crimes Trials: Einsatzgruppen Case

    War Crimes Trials - Subsequent Trial Proceedings, Case 9 (Einsatzgruppen Case), Nuremberg, Germany, October 15, 1947. Ohlendorf testifying about the number of persons his Einsatzgruppe D killed. Cross examined by US prosecutor James Heath. Musmanno rules that Ohlendorf's testimony from the International Military Tribunal regarding the number 90,000 victims stands.

  8. Barbie Trial -- Day 11 -- Victims testify

    Louis Simonet speaks about his arrest, interrogation, transfer to Montluc prison, and Neuengamme. 17:27:00 Regine Skorka, speaks about her arrest as a member of the Resistance and subsequent torture at Montluc, transport to Drancy, and life in Auschwitz. At 17:45, she addresses the sub-camp for Roma in her testimony. 17:54:30 Jerome Scorin (brother of R. Skorka) testifies.

  9. Translators at work at Nuremberg Trial

    (Munich 211 and 222) War Crimes Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, July 1946. CU, Wac? wearing earphones seated in visitors' gallery. LS, translation section during court session. MS, British officer and two women of the translation section in courtroom. CU, women translators giving answers of witness in English. MS, girl translator giving answers in French. CU, male interpreter speaking in French. MS, group of women; one is translating in Russian. CU, another Russian woman translator speaking into microphone. CU, German translator's section at work.

  10. "Inside the Nuremberg trials: a prosecutor's comprehensive account"

    Contains drafts of the preface and several chapters from a proposed book by Drexel A.Sprecher, based on his experiences serving with the Office of the U.S. Chief of Counsel during the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg.

  11. British and French prosecutors' final speeches at Nuremberg Trial

    (Munich 327) War Crimes Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, July 29-30, 1946. Partial coverage of Chief British Prosecutor Sir Hartly Shawcross' final speech. Pan, Prosecutor for the Provisional Government of the French Republic, August Champetier de Ribes, starting the introduction of his final speech. Pan from de Ribes speaking to defense tables and back to de Ribes.

  12. Details on the career of Hess at Nuremberg

    (Paris 543) War Crimes Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, February 7, 1946. Col. Griffith-Jones, British prosecutor, giving a resume of the career of Rudolph Hess. MS, prisoners' dock as Hess and others listen to Col. Griffith-Jones.

  13. Barbie Trial -- Day 4 -- Dabringhaus testifies; Barbie and the Counter Intelligence Corps

    18:13 Lawyer Nordmann and witness Ehrard Dabringhaus discuss the supposed infiltration of U.S. Secret Service by former SS. 18:19 Dabringhaus's opinion to "the use of assassins." 18:21 Prosecuter and Dabringhaus. The mode of payment the U.S. Army Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC) used when they employed Barbie. 18:25 The abundance of reports from Barbie in the CIC and the objectives the CIC had for pursuing them. 18:28 Barbie's working methods in the CIC.

  14. Indictment: Opening Petition for the Auschwitz Trial Antrag auf Eröffnung des Hauptverfahrens, Anklageschrift, Landgericht Frankfurt am Main

    Contains files from the opening of the main proceedings of the first Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial.

  15. "Justice, justice shall you pursue"

    Consists of two copies (one in English and one in Hebrew) of "Justice, justice you shall pursue" by Jacob Weinberger Hashisha. In the form of a drama, Hashisha describes the final judgment of the Nazi leaders in the presence of God, the prophets, and the matriarchs. The work is intended for recitation or performance.

  16. Court of appeals decision in the Paul Touvier case

    Contains information about the persecution, deportation, and killing of Jews in Lyon, France, from 1943 to 1944, and the destruction of Jewish property in Lyon, France, in 1943.

  17. Barbie Trial -- Day 3 -- Barbie's life after WWII in South America

    14:43 Barbie is examined concerning his emigration to South America. 14:52 Interrogation into Barbie's life in South America from 1951 until 1972. Of particular interest to the court were his business activites at the time. 15:01 Barbie's life after being discovered by the Klasrfelds in 1972. 15:07 Barbie's trouble with the Bolivian government. 15:16 The death of Barbie's children and wife. 15:21 Barbie's eventual political activites in Bolivia. 15:28 Barbie's extradition from Boilivia.

  18. Adolf Eichmann police reports from the Tucumán Police Archives

    The documents contain information that police in Tucumán province, Argentina, collected and maintained on Adolf Eichmann, who lived there under the alias of Ricardo Klement.

  19. Ivano-Frankovsky Regional Museum records

    Contains statements, reports, photographs, and articles relating to the German and Hungarian occupation of Ukraine; atrocities committed against Jews and Soviet citizens in the region; statistics for executions; names of Gestapo leaders suspected of crimes; and the Tabor Smertii "death camp" at Stanislav, Ukraine (Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine).

  20. Joseph Stone war crime trial collection

    Contains, but is not limited to, trial transcripts, copies of evidence documents, and trial summaries, relating to the war crime trials held in Nuremberg, Germany, from 1946 to 1948. Several of the documents relate to Joseph Stone's involvement in the "German Industrialists Case" and matters relating to the use of prisoners of war and slave labor.