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National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, Md.
  The accused and their defense attorneys at the International Military Tribunal courtroom.
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WHO WAS PUT ON TRIAL?

 

A union leader. A police chief. A newspaper editor. These people were among the defendants charged with crimes in the aftermath of World War II.

The International Military Tribunal and a series of later trials held at Nuremberg, Germany, were not focused on the Holocaust alone, as reflected in the range of criminal charges brought before these courts. After much debate, the IMT charged 24 defendants selected to represent a cross-section of German diplomatic, economic, political, and military leadership. Most of the defendants were highly sophisticated professionals, yet they were also men who committed almost unspeakable crimes.

 

 

The range of Nazi crimes was vast and legal efforts to punish them often yielded only limited results. Still, the Nuremberg trials set important precedents. The IMT declared to the world that “following orders” was not a legitimate defense for criminal acts. The trials also rejected claims that heads of state should be exempt from prosecution.

The Nuremberg defendants were symbolic; the individuals held legally accountable for the Holocaust were only a token number, a fraction of those involved in perpetrating Nazi crimes. And what to do with those crimes for which no witnesses survived?

 

   
Describes forced labor at the Buna works
Personal stories
 
 

 

National Archives - Film

Defendants in the dock

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Copyright © United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D.C.
Encyclopedia Last Updated: October 7, 2008

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