Nazi Conspiracy & Aggression TO THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL
In pursuance of the assignment by the Tribunal, we, the
medical experts of the Soviet Delegation, together with the
physicians of the English Delegation and in the presence of
one representative of the American Medical Delegation, have
examined Rudolf Hess and made a report on our examination of
Mr. Hess together
[Page 101]
with our conclusions and interpretation of the behavior of
Mr. Hess.
The statement of the general conclusions has been signed
only by the physicians of the Soviet Delegation and by
Professor Delay, the medical expert of the French
Delegation.
(signed) Professor Krasnushkin,
November 17, 1945
(a) Conclusions
After observation and an examination of Rudolf Hess the
undersigned have reached the following conclusions:
1. No essential physical deviations from normality were
observed
2. His mental conditions are of a mixed type. He is an
unstable person, which in technical terms is called a
psychopathic personality. The data concerning his illness
during the period of the last four years submitted by one of
us who had him under observation in England, show that he
had a delusion of being poisoned and other similar paranoic
notions.
Partly as a reaction to the failure of his mission there,
the abnormal manifestations increased and led to attempts at
suicide.
In addition to the above mentioned he has noticeable
hysterical tendencies which caused a development of various
symptoms, primarily, of amnesia that lasted from November
1943 to June of 1944 and resisted all attempts to be cured.
The amnesia symptom may disappear with changing
circumstances.
The second period of amnesia started in February of 1945 and
has lasted up through the present.
3. At present he is not insane in the strict sense of the
word. His amnesia does not prevent him completely from
understanding what is going on around him but it will
interfere with his ability to conduct his defense and to
understand details of the past which would appear as factual
data.
4. To clarify the situation we recommend that a narco-
analysis
[Page 102]
be performed on him and, if the Court decides to submit him
to trial, the problem should be subsequently reexamined
again from a psychiatric point of view.
The conclusion reached on November 14 by the physicians of
the British Delegation, Lord Moran, Dr. T. Rees and Dr. G.
Riddoch, and the physicians of the Soviet Delegation,
Professors Krasnushkin, Sepp, and Kurshakov, was also
arrived at on November 15 by the representative of
the French Delegation, Professor Jean Delay.
After an examination of Mr. Hess which took place on
November 15, 1945, the undersigned Professors and experts of
the Soviet Delegation, Krasnushkin, Sepp and Kurshakov, and
Professor Jean Delay, the expert from the French Delegation,
have agreed on the following statement:
Mr. Hess categorically refused to be submitted to narco-
analysis and resisted all other procedures intended to
effect a cure of his amnesia, and stated that he would agree
to undergo treatment only after the trial. The behavior of
Mr. Hess makes it impossible to apply the
methods suggested in Paragraph 4 of the report of November
14 and to follow the suggestion of that Paragraph in present
form.
(signed) Professor Krasnushkin,
(b) Record of Examination of Rudolf Hess
According to the information obtained on Nov. 16, 1945,
during the interrogation of Rosenberg who had seen Hess
immediately before the latter's flight to England, Hess gave
no evidence of any abnormality either in appearance or
conversation. He was, as usual, quiet and composed. Nor was
it apparent that he might have-been nervous. Prior to this,
he was a calm person, habitually suffering pains in the
region of the stomach.
As can be judged on the basis of the report of the English
psychiatrist, Doctor Rees, who had Hess under observation
from the first days of his flight to England, Hess, after
the airplane
[Page 103]
crash, disclosed no evidence of a brain injury, but, upon
arrest and incarceration, he began to give expression to
ideas of persecution. He feared that he would be poisoned,
or killed and his death represented as a suicide, and that
all this would be done by the English under the hypnotic
influence of the Jews. Furthermore, these delusions of
persecution were maintained up to the news of the
catastrophe suffered by the German Army at Stalingrad when
the manifestations were replaced by amnesia. According to
Doctor Rees, the delusions of persecution and the amnesia
were observed not to take place simultaneously. Furthermore,
there were two attempts at suicide. A knife wound, inflicted
during the second attempt, in the skin near the heart gave
evidence of a clearly hysterico-demonstrative character.
After this there was again observed a change from amnesia to
delusions of persecution, and during this period he wrote
that he was simulating his amnesia, and, finally, again
entered into a state of amnesia which has been prolonged up
to the present.
According to the examination of Rudolf Hess on Nov. 14,
1945, the following was disclosed.
Hess complains of frequent cramping pains in the region of
the stomach which appear independent of the taking of food,
and headaches in the frontal lobes during mental strain,
and, finally, of loss of memory.
In general his condition is marked by a pallor of the skin
and a noticeable reduction in food intake.
Regarding the internal organs of Hess, the pulse is 92, and
a shakening of the heart tone is noticeable. There has been
no change in the condition of the other internal organs.
Concerning the neurological aspect, there are no symptoms of
organic impairment of the nervous system.
Psychologically, Hess is in a state of clear consciousness;
knows that he is in prison at Nurnberg under indictment as a
war criminal; has read, and, according to his own words, is
acquainted with the charges against him. He answers
questions rapidly and to the point. His speech is coherent,
his thoughts formed with precision and correctness and they
are accompanied by sufficient emotionally expressive
movements. Also, there is no kind of evidence of paralogism;
It should also be noted here, that the present psychological
examination, which was conducted by Lieut. Gilbert, M.D.,
bears out the testimony that the intelligence of Hess is
normal and in some instances above the average. His
movements are natural and not forced.
He has expressed no delirious fancies nor does he give any
delirious explanation for the painful sensation in his
stomach or
[Page 104]
the loss of memory, as was previously attested to by Doctor
Rees, namely, when Hess ascribed them to poisoning. At the
present time, to the question about the reason for his
painful sensations and the loss of memory, Hess answers that
this is for the doctors to know. According to his own
assertions, he can remember almost nothing of his former
life. The gaps in Hess' memory are ascertained only on the
basis of the subjective changing of his testimony about his
inability to remember this or that person or event given at
different times. What he knows at the present time is, in
his own words, what he allegedly learned only recently from
the information of those around him and the films which have
been shown him.
On Nov. 14 Hess refused the injection of narcotics which
were offered for the purpose of making an analysis of his
psychological condition. On Nov. 15, in answer to Prof.
Delay's offer, he definitely and firmly refused narcosis and
explained to him that, in general, he would take
all measures to cure his amnesia only upon completion of the
trial.
All that has been exposed above, we are convinced, permits,
of the interpretation that the deviation from the norm in
the behavior of Hess takes the following forms:
I. In the psychological personality of Hess there are no
changes typical of the progressive schizophrenic disease,
and therefore the delusions, from which he suffered
periodically while in England, cannot be considered as
manifestations of a schizophrenic paranoia, and must be
recognized as the expression of a psychogenic paranoic
reaction, that is, the psychologically comprehensible
reaction of an unstable (psychologically) personality to the
situation (the failure of his mission, arrest and
incarceration). Such an interpretation of the delirious
statements of Hess in England is bespoken by their
disappearance, appearance and repeated disappearance
depending on external circumstances which affected the
mental state of Hess.
II. The loss of memory of Hess is not the result of some
kind of mental disease but represents hysterical amnesia,
the basis of which is a subconscious inclination toward self-
defense as well as a deliberate and conscious tendency
toward it. Such behavior often terminates when the
hysterical person is faced with an unavoidable necessity of
conducting himself correctly. Therefore, the amnesia of Hess
may end upon his being brought to trial.
III. Rudolf Hess, prior to his flight to England, did not
suffer from any kind of insanity, nor is he now suffering
from it. At the present time he exhibits hysterical behavior
with signs of a
[Page 105]
conscious-intentional (simulated character, which does not
exonerate him from his responsibility under the indictment.
(signed) Professor Krasnushkin.
17 November 1945
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Volume
I Chapter IV
Motions, Rulings & Explanatory Material Rel
ating to Certain of the Defendants
(Part 8 of 9)
(3) Soviet Medical Report
Doctor of Medicine
(signed) Professor Sepp,
Honorary Scientist, Regular Member of the Academy of
Medicine
(signed) Professor Kushakov,
Doctor of Medicine, Chief Therapeutist of the Commissariat
of Health of the USSR
Doctor of Medicine
(signed) Professor Sepp,
Honorary Scientist, Regular Member of the Academy of
Medicine
(signed) Professor Kurshakov,
Doctor of Medicine, Chief Theraputist of the Commissariat of
Health of the USSR
(signed) Professor Jean Delay
of the School of Medicine in Paris
Doctor of Medicine
(signed) Professor Sepp,
Honorary Scientist, Regular Member of the Academy of
Medicine
(signed) Professor Kurshakov,
Doctor of Medicine, Chief Theraputist of the Commissariat of
Health of the USSR