Nazi Conspiracy & Aggression [Page 83]
Chapter IV
MOTIONS, RULINGS, AND EXPLANATORY MATERIAL
Although 24 individuals were named as defendants in the
Indictment signed in Berlin on 6th October 1945, only 22
remained as defendants when the trial commenced on 20
November. The number had been reduced by the suicide of
Robert Ley and by the Tribunal's severance of
Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach from the proceedings. Of
the 22 surviving defendants only 20 appeared in the
prisoners' dock at the opening of court. Martin Bormann, in
the absence of clear evidence to the contrary, was presumed
to be alive and at large. Ernst Kaltenbrunner had been
hospitalized by a cranial hemorrhage, and as a consequence
was unable to be present at the trial save for one period of
a few days. Defense counsel for two of the twenty men in the
prisoners' dock, Hess and Streicher, sought to have the
proceedings against their clients dismissed on the grounds
of their mental incapacity to stand trial. Expert medical
examiners concluded that both defendants were fit to defend
themselves, and the proceedings against
them were resumed. One of them, Hess, who had claimed to be
a victim of amnesia, created something of a sensation by
confessing in open court that he had only been pretending to
suffer from amnesia and that his memory was actually in good
repair.
Fuller explanatory notes concerning the positions taken by
the prosecution and the defense and the actions of the
Tribunal in the cases of each of these six defendants,
together with significant papers bearing on these matters,
are printed hereinafter
1. ROBERT LEY
Pending the opening of the trial on 20th November 1945 the
defendants were held in the prison at the Palace of Justice
in Nurnberg, under the custody of the United States Army. In
the evening of October 25 the guard on watch before the cell
of Robert Ley noticed that the prisoner had maintained the
same position for some time without moving. The guard
entered the cell to find that although the prison officials
had taken every known precaution, Ley had succeeded in
committing suicide. Ley had ripped the hemmed edge from a
towel, twisted it, soaked it in
water, and fashioned it into a crude noose which he fastened
to an-overhead toilet flush pipe. He had then stuffed his
mouth with rags, apparently torn from his own underwear.
When he seated himself, strangulation was produced, and
Robert Ley had succeeded in ac-
[Page 84]
complishing his exit from the court of judgment, and from
the world of living men. A farewell message written by Ley,
together with other statements made by him during
imprisonment, may be found at the end of the last volume
(Statements XI XIII ).
The
original plaintext version
of this file is available via
ftp.
[
Previous |
Index |
Next ]
Home ·
Site Map ·
What's New? ·
Search
Nizkor
© The Nizkor Project, 1991-2012
This site is intended for educational purposes to teach about the Holocaust and
to combat hatred.
Any statements or excerpts found on this site are for educational purposes only.
As part of these educational purposes, Nizkor may
include on this website materials, such as excerpts from the writings of racists and antisemites. Far from approving these writings, Nizkor condemns them and
provides them so that its readers can learn the nature and extent of hate and antisemitic discourse. Nizkor urges the readers of these pages to condemn racist
and hate speech in all of its forms and manifestations.
Volume
I Chapter IV
Motions, Rulings & Explanatory Material Rel
ating to Certain of the Defendants
(Part 1 of 9)
RELATING TO CERTAIN OF THE DEFENDANTS