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      Thomas  Dodd, second in
         command for U.S. prosecution team at Nuremberg wrote in  a letter to his wife:    "You know how I have despised anti-Semitism. You  know how strongly I feel toward those  who preach intolerance of any  kind. With that knowledge -- you will understand when I  tell you that  this staff is about seventy-five percent Jewish. Now my point is that  the  Jews should stay away from this trial -- for their own sake.   "For  -- mark this well -- the charge 'a war for the Jews' is still being   made and in the post-war years it will be made again and again. "The  too large percentage of Jewish men and women here will be cited as  proof of this charge.  Sometimes it seems that the Jews will never learn  about these things. They seem intent on  bringing new difficulties down  on their own heads. I do not like to write about this matter  --it is  distasteful to me -- but I am disturbed about it. They are pushing and  crowding  and competing with each other and with everyone else."       
      
               
      
      Dachau’s 800-Pound Kangaroo (Court)                             
                                 
 
 The
          Dachau trial began on November 15, 1945 and ended four weeks later on  December 13. 
         All 40 of the defendants were convicted, with 36 being  sentenced to death by hanging. [1] This article will examine whether the defendants at the Dachau trial received a fair hearing.                                     
         Unjustness of the Dachau Trials     The Dachau tribunal was composed of eight senior U.S. military  officers with the rank  of at least full colonel. The president of the  court, Brig. Gen. John M. Lentz, was the  former commanding general of  the 3rd Army’s 87th Infantry Division.[2]  These U.S.  military officers, with no formal legal training, were not  qualified
         to objectively review the  evidence presented in the trial.      William Denson, the chief prosecuting attorney,
         used a legal concept  called “common design”  for establishing that
         camp personnel at Dachau  were guilty of violating the laws and usages  of war.
         The Dachau tribunal  accepted Denson’s legal concept of common design. In common  design,  Denson exploited a legal concept broad enough to apply to everyone who  had  worked in Dachau.[3] In essence, every Dachau defendant was guilty unless proven innocent  (a verdict
         most-unlikely to ensue).             
                   The
         rules of evidence used at the Dachau trial were also atrociously  lax. For example, 
         hearsay evidence presented by the prosecution was  routinely allowed by the “judges.”  Such testimony was permitted at the  Dachau trials if it seemed “relevant to a reasonable  man.” This  departure from normal Anglo-Saxon law was intended to compensate  for the  fact that some potential eyewitnesses had died in captivity.[4]      False
         witnesses were used at most of the American-run war-crimes  trials at Dachau. 
         Joseph Halow, a young U.S. court reporter at the  Dachau trials in 1947, described  some
         of the false witnesses at the  Dachau trials:       [T]he major portion of the witnesses for the prosecution in the  concentration-camp  cases were what came to be known as “professional  witnesses,” and everyone working  at Dachau regarded them as such.  “Professional,” since they were paid for each day  they testified. In  addition, they were provided free housing and food, at a time when 
         these  were often difficult to come by in Germany. Some of them stayed in  Dachau for  months,
         testifying in every one of the concentration-camp  cases. In other words, these  witnesses made
         their living testifying for  the prosecution. Usually, they were former  inmates from the camps,
         and  their strong hatred of the Germans should, at the very least,  have  called their testimony
         into question.[5]        Stephen
         F. Pinter, an American lawyer who served as a U.S. Army  prosecuting attorney  at
         the American-run trials of Germans at Dachau,  confirmed Halow’s statement. In a 1960  affidavit Pinter said that  “notoriously perjured witnesses” were used to convict Germans  of false  and unfounded crimes. Pinter stated, “Unfortunately, as a result of  these
         miscarriages  of justice, many innocent persons were convicted and  some were executed.”[6]      The
         use of false witnesses has also been acknowledged by Johann  Neuhäusler, who was 
         an ecclesiastical resistance fighter interned in two  German concentration camps from 
         1941 to 1945. Neuhäusler stated that in  some of the American-run trials “many of the witnesses, perhaps 90%,  were paid professional witnesses with criminal records ranging  from  robbery to homosexuality.”[7]      Lt.
         Col. Douglas T. Bates, the chief defense attorney, was also not  permitted to fully  cross-examine
         all of the prosecution witnesses. For  example, prosecution witness  Arthur Haulot,
         a 32-year-old journalist and  former lieutenant in the Belgian army, threatened 
         to leave the trial  after being aggressively cross-examined by Bates. An hour later, Bates   and the other defense lawyers met with Haulot outside of the courtroom.  Bates put a friendly  arm around Haulot’s shoulder and said: “We just  want to thank you. By speaking up, you  got us properly scolded. We were  doing what we had to do, and frankly it disgusted us.  You won’t be  bothered like that again.”[8]                            Such a concession by the defense counsel could
         never have occurred if  the trial had taken  place in a court in America. However,
         at Dachau the  defense attorneys were soldiers who  took seriously reprimands from
          their superior officers, who were judges in the trial.[9]      Signed
         confessions by the defendants were often used to obtain  convictions at the Dachau trial.  Evidence was presented that many of the  defendants in the Dachau trial made their  confessions under torture.  For example, defendant Johann Kick testified:       I was under arrest here in
         Dachau from sixth to 15th of May. During  this time I was  beaten all day and night. I had to
         stand at attention  for hours. I had to kneel down on  pointed objects. I had to stand under a
          lamp for hours and look into the light, at  which time I was also beaten  and kicked. As a result
         of this treatment my arm was  paralyzed for  about 10 weeks.[10]        Kick
         testified that as a result of these beatings, he signed the confession presented to  him
         by U.S. Lt. Paul Guth.[11]  Kick’s report regarding his torture, however, made no  difference to the
          eight U.S. military officers who presided as judges in the trial.      Common Design     The prosecution used the legal device of common design to establish
          that (wartime) camp  personnel at Dachau were guilty of violating the  laws and
         usages of war. Defense attorney  Douglas Bates in his closing  statement challenged
         the court’s use of common design. Bates said:   
            The most talked-of phrase has been “common design.”
         Let us be honest  and admit that  common design found its way into the judgment for the  simple
         expedient of trying 40  defendants in one mass trial instead of  having to try one each in 40
         trials. Where is  the common design?  Conspicuous by its absence, established for the purpose
         of trapping  some  defendants against whom there was a shortage of proof—by arguing, for
          example, that if Schoep was a guard in the camp, then he was equally  responsible for everything  that went on. There are guards at each gate  of this American post today. Is it not  far-fetched
         to say they are  responsible for crimes that may be committed within the  confines of this  large
         area? If every one of the defendants is guilty of participating  in  that large common design,
         then it becomes necessary to hold  responsible every member  of the Nazi Party and every citizen
         of Germany  who contributed to the waging of total war— and I submit that can’t be
          done.      I read this in Life magazine today: “Justice
         cannot be  measured quantitatively. If the  whole of Germany is guilty of murder, no  doubt it
         would be just to exterminate the  German people. The real  problem is to know who is guilty of
         what.” Perhaps the  prosecution has  arrived at a solution as to how an entire people  can be indicted as an  acting part of a mythical common design.     
         And a new definition of murder has been introduced along with common  design. This 
         new principle of law says, “I am given food and told to  feed these people. The food  is
         inadequate. I feed them with it, and they  die of starvation. I am guilty of murder.”  Germany
         was fighting a war  she had lost six months before. All internal business had  completely  broken
         down. I presume people like Filleboeck and Wetzel should have   reenacted the miracle at Galilee,
         where five loaves and fishes fed a  multitude.      There has
         been a lot of impressive law read by the chief counsel, and  it is good law—Miller,  Wharton.
         The sad thing is that little of it is  applicable to the facts in this case. Perhaps  we have
         not been diligent  enough in seeking applicable law. Some think the prosecution  has found  applicable
         law in the Rules of Land Warfare on the doctrine of superior  orders.  We have no intention of
         arguing that executions by the German  Reich were due process.  Nevertheless, we contend that
         executions were  the result of law of  the then recognized  regime in Germany and that  members
         of the firing squad were simple soldiers  acting in the same  capacity as in any military organization
         in the world….      If law cloaks a bloodbath in Germany,
         the idea of law will be the  real victim. Lynch law,  of which we have known a good deal in America,
          often gets the right man. But its aftermath  is a contempt for the law, a  contempt that breeds
         more criminals. It is far, far better that  some  guilty men escape than that the idea of law
         be endangered. In the long   run, the idea of law is our best defense against Nazism in all its
         forms    In closing, I ask permission to paraphrase a great statesman.
         Never  in the history of  judicial procedure has so much punishment been asked  against so many
         on so little proof.[12]                  Despite its injustice, William Denson refused to acknowledge that the  legal concept of common  design should not apply in this case. Denson  stated: “I do not want the court to feel that it is  necessary to  establish individual acts of misconduct to show guilt or innocence. If  he  participated in this common design, as evidence has shown, it is  sufficient to establish his
         guilt.”[13]                                      
         The Case of Dr. Schilling          The injustice and hypocrisy
         of the Dachau trial is illustrated by the  case of Dr. Klaus Karl Schilling  (pictured
         right at his execution). Malaria  experiments at Dachau were performed by  Dr.
         Schilling, who was an  internationally famous parasitologist. Dr. Schilling was  ordered
         by  Heinrich Himmler in 1936 to conduct medical research at Dachau for the   specific
         purpose of immunizing individuals against malaria. The medical  supervisor at  Dachau
         would select the people to be inoculated and then  send this list of people to Berlin 
         to be approved by a higher authority.  Those who were chosen were then  turned
         over to Dr. Schilling to conduct  the medical experimentation.[14]      Dr.
         Schilling acknowledged in court that he had performed malaria  experiments on inmates  in
         Dachau. When asked why these experiments had  not been performed on animals,  Dr.
         Schilling replied:      
         I have been asked hundreds of times why I do not work with animals.  The simple answer  is that malaria of the human being cannot be  transmitted to animals. Even highly  developed
         apes and chimpanzees are  not receivers of malaria. That is a recognized principle of  malaria
          experiments.[15]        William
         Denson stated that Dr. Schilling was “nothing more than a  common murderer”  whose medical experimentation could not be compared to  that performed in the United States.[16]      However,
         evidence in the later Doctors’ trial in Nuremberg showed  that doctors in the  United
         States performed medical experiments on  prison inmates and conscientious objectors 
         during the war. The evidence  showed that large-scale malaria experiments were performed on  800  American prisoners, many of them black, from federal penitentiaries in  Atlanta and state  penitentiaries in Illinois and New Jersey. U.S.  doctors conducted human experiments with  malaria tropica, one of the most dangerous of the malaria strains, to aid the U.S. war effort in  Southeast Asia.[17]      Although
         Dr. Schilling’s malaria experiments were no more-dangerous  or illegal than the 
         malaria experiments performed by U.S. doctors, Dr.  Schilling had to pay for his malaria  experiments by being hanged to  death while his wife watched.[18] The U.S. doctors  who performed malaria experiments on humans were never charged
         with any crime.                                     Verdict      It took the Dachau tribunal only 90 minutes
         to convict all 40  defendants. Joshua Greene  writes: “Even if history looked
         back and  judged his work charitably, Denson might have  imagined one hour and
         30  minutes to be a shockingly short time in which to determine the fate  of  40
         men.”[19]        
          William Denson had no doubt that the U.S. Army tribunal would find the German
         defendants  guilty of war crimes.[20]  The 90 minutes it took to convict the 40 defendants was also  probably  not a
         surprise to Denson. In fact, in the later Mauthausen trial in  which Denson  was
         the lead prosecutor, the American military tribunal  took only 90 minutes to find all 61  defendants guilty.[21]      Historian
         Tomaz Jardim writes concerning these verdicts: “Given the  brevity of deliberations,  it is clear that the judges spent no  significant amount of time reviewing the evidence, examining  legal  precedent, or evaluating the issues surrounding the common-design charge  that  defense counsel had raised. In all likelihood, the judges had  begun deliberations with their
          minds made up.”[22]      Conclusion     Benjamin Ferencz acknowledges the injustice
         of the Dachau trial:      
         I was there for the liberation, as a sergeant in the Third Army,  General Patton’s Army,  and my task was to collect camp records and  witness testimony, which became the  basis
         for prosecutions…But the  Dachau trials were utterly contemptible. There was  nothing resembling
          the rule of law. More like court-martials…It was not my idea of  a  judicial process.
         I mean, I was a young, idealistic Harvard law  graduate.[23]        Ferencz
         states that nobody including himself protested  against such procedures in the
         Dachau trials.[24]                  The defendants did not receive a fair and impartial
         hearing in the  Dachau trial. The use of  interrogation methods designed to produce
         false  confessions, lax rules of evidence and  procedure, the presumption that
          the defendants were guilty unless proven innocent,  American military  judges
         with little or no legal training, unreliable eyewitness  testimony, the nonexistence
         of an appeals process, and the inability of  defense counsel to aggressively  cross-examine
         some of the prosecution  witnesses ensured the conviction of all of the  defendants
         in the Dachau  trial.       Endnotes     [1] Jaworski, Leon, Confession and Avoidance: A Memoir,  Garden City, N.Y: Anchor Press/Doubleday,
         1979, p. 115.        
         [2] Greene, Joshua M., Justice at Dachau: The Trials of an  American Prosecutor,
         New York: Broadway Books, 2003, p. 41.               [5] Halow, Joseph, Innocent at Dachau, Newport Beach, Cal.:  Institute for Historical Review,
         1992, p. 61.        
         [6]  Sworn and notarized statement by Stephen F. Pinter, Feb. 9, 1960.   Facsimile in Erich Kern,
         ed., Verheimlichte Dokumente, Munich: 1988, p.  429.      
            [7] Frei, Norbert, Adenauer’s Germany and the Nazi Past: The Politics of Amnesty 
         and Integration, New York: Columbia University Press, 2002, pp. 110-111.         [8] Greene, Joshua M., Justice at Dachau: The Trials of an American  Prosecutor,
         New York: Broadway Books, 2003, pp. 55-57.                       
         [14] McCallum, John Dennis, Crime Doctor, Mercer  Island, Wash.: The Writing Works, Inc.,
         1978, pp. 64-65.        
         [15] Greene, Joshua M., Justice at Dachau: The Trials of an  American Prosecutor,
         New York: Broadway Books, 2003, p. 88.           
         [17] Schmidt, Ulf, Karl Brandt: The Nazi Doctor,  New York: Continuum Books, 2007, p. 376.   
              [18] McCallum, John Dennis, Crime Doctor, Mercer  Island, Wash.: The Writing Works, Inc.,
         1978, pp. 66-67.        
         [19] Greene, Joshua M., Justice at Dachau: The Trials of an  American Prosecutor,
         New York: Broadway Books, 2003, p. 115.              
         [22] Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge,  Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2012,
         pp. 180-181.        
         [23] Stuart, Heikelina Verrijn and Simons, Marlise, The Prosecutor and  the Judge,
         Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009, p. 17.       [24] Ibid.     _______________________________________________________________________________       		    			The Bizarre Lies Told At
         Nuremberg To Execute Germans They Wish You’d Forget   		     	      	  
   By JohnWear    …many
         of the charges made at Nuremberg are so bizarre  that most  defenders
         of the Holocaust story have long since let them  lapse”.     
   After Germany’s defeat in WWII, the Nuremberg and  later trials were organized primarily  for political purposes rather
          than to dispense impartial justice. Wears War brings to you each  week a  quote
         from the many fine men and women who were openly appalled by the  trials.  All
         of these people were highly respected and prominent in their  field, at least until they  spoke out against the trials.         Many defenders of the Holocaust story maintain that the 42-volume Trial of the Major  War Criminals (The Blue Series) supplies a massive compilation of damning evidence
         against  Germany’s National Socialist regime. In his book Made in
         Russia: The Holocaust,  Carlos  Porter confronts the evidence directly by
         reproducing page after  page from the Blue Series.  Porter shows that many of the
         charges made  at Nuremberg are so bizarre that most defenders  of the Holocaust
         story  have long since let them lapse. In addition to killing Jews in homicidal  gas  chambers,
         the Germans at Nuremberg were accused of:    –building special electrical appliances to zap inmates to death with mass electrical shocks;    –killing 20,000 Jews in a village near
         Auschwitz with an atomic bomb;    –forcing prisoners to climb trees and then killing the prisoners by cutting down
         the trees;    –killing 840,000
         Russian prisoners at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp using  a pedal-driven brain-bashing
         machine, and then burning the bodies in four mobile crematories;   
         –torturing and executing people at the Yanov camp in Russia in
         time to musiccreated  by a special orchestra selected from among the prisoners,
         and then shooting every  member of the orchestra;    —grinding the bones of 200 people at one time
         as described  in documents and photographs that have disappeared;    —making lampshades,
         handbags, driving gloves for SS officers,  book bindings, saddles, house slippers,
         etc. out of human skin;    –killing
         prisoners and concentration camp inmates for everything  from having soiled underwear
         to having armpit hair; and    —steaming people to death like lobsters in steam chambers at Treblinka.    After this incredible survey of Nuremberg
         atrocity evidence, Carlos  Porter provides  numerous examples of improper prosecution
         tactics at  Nuremberg. The defendants at  Nuremberg were rarely able to confront
          their accusers, since affidavits from witnesses  who had been deposed  months
         before sufficed. The prosecution made it difficult for the   defense lawyers to
         have timely access to the documents introduced into  evidence by the prosecution.
         Also, photocopies and transcripts were  usually submitted into evidence  instead
         of the original German  documents, which in many cases seemed to have disappeared. 
         Finally, the  defense had access only to those documents which the prosecution  considered  material to the case. The defense had no right to review the  tons of  remaining
         documents that might help them defend their clients.        American 
         soldiers with deloused clothing airing outside the dis-infestation  chambers, 1945.  The dis-infestation chambers and Zyklon-B continued to  be used after the Allied liberation      Quote Source: Porter, Carlos Whitlock, Made in Russia:  The Holocaust, Historical Review Press, 1988.        Repeat After
         Me: “The Nuremberg Trials Dispensed Fair &  Objective Justice For
         The Greater Good Of Humanity!”          Decades
         Later Americans Pay To Administer Reparation Agreements: “ After  Survivors Interfered In U.S. State & Federal Contract Tenders In  2016. Repeat  After Me: “The Nuremberg Trials Dispensed Fair &  Objective Justice For The Greater GUILT Of
         Humanity!”  _______________________________     "The Ritchie Boys"
            A little known mini-army of spies, propagandists and interrogators
         which The New York Times had written about years ago (headline above from 2006). This special unit was bolstered
         by the presence of many German-speaking Jews (as well as other assorted communists) -- many of whom were ex-pats
         whose parents had left Germany after The Great One (that's Hitler for you newbies & normies)
         took charge.
   Beginning
          in 1942, the agents were rigorously trained in  intelligence and  psychological warfare in Camp Ritchie, MD before being
         sent to Europe to  spread psy-op propaganda and "interrogate" captured Germans soldiers  and civilians. According to the  "60 Minutes" piece, these operatives were responsible for most of the
          combat intelligence gathered on the Western Front. 
        Cunning Jewish operatives were recruited to wage psychological warfare
         and to "interrogate" both German POWs and civilians.
       
            The  usefulness of the
         60 Minutes feature -- and the various "mainstream  news" article which it spawned in recent days -- lies not so
         much in the  fact that we learned a few new things. It's the fact that a "respected"  and "authoritative"
         source confirmed what we "anti-Semitic" ™  historical revisionists
         have known all along -- specifically, that  Jewish intelligence operatives dominated the wartime propaganda effort  and the
         often torturous interrogation of German POWs and "Nazi" (a Jewish propaganda term) officials.
  Following  is a bullet-point review of the 60 Minutes puff piece which featured  interviews with a few surviving members
         of "The Ritchie Boys" -- (our own observations highlighted in red, in parenthesis) - Camp Ritchie was a secret American military intelligence center during the
         war. 
  
 - About
         11,000 "Ritchie  Boys" -- a great many of them
         Jewish and 2,000 of them born in Germany  -- were rigorously trained as spies and interrogators. All were sworn to  secrecy.
         (I believe that's known as a "conspiracy.")
 
 - They were very effective.
         Most of the intelligence gathered on the battlefield was collected by German-speaking Ritchie Boys. (Vee have vays ov making you talk)
 
 - Some of their methods (such as the smashing of the testicles of German prisoners) remain "officially"
         classified. 
 
 - Recruits were
         chosen for their knowledge of language, European culture and high IQs.
 
 - The men interviewed by 60 Minutes openly admitted that they sought revenge against the Germans. (who, by the way, up until the great betrayal of 1918 had been so nice to the Jews).
 
 - Cooperative  German
         POWs were induced into talking by psychological techniques that  built trust with the interrogator. When the soft approach
         failed, the  POWs were threatened with transfer to the dreaded Soviets (whose own interrogators
         were also mainly Jewish NKVD). 
 
 - To add a fear factor to the "persuasion" effort,
         Jewish Agents sometimes dressed up as visiting Russian commissars. 
 
 - SS heroes and high-ranking
         "Nazis" were singled out for more abusive techniques and taunting  by their Jewish inquisitors.
 
 - Ritchie  Boys entered the Western concentration
         camps. Soon afterwards, they  propagandized the German public with atrocity fairy tales about what  their government had done.
         (Their psych war lies about the camps were fed to the western press as well).
 
 - They  led German citizens on tours of the concentration camps to "educate"  the local population
         about the evil Hitler had perpetrated. The people  were shown shrunken heads of Jews and lamp shades said to have been made
          with the flesh of dead Jews. (Even Jewish Holohoax "scholars" now admit that these were
         propaganda props).
 
 - They provided "evidence" for the Nuremberg circus trials -- and interrogated such high
         profile "Nazis" as Hans Goebbels (the brother of Joseph) and Julius Streicher (who was lynched at Nuremberg).
 
 - Dozens of Ritchie
         Boys worked at the Nuremberg Trials as prosecutors, interrogators and translators.
 
 - Ritchie Boys were instrumental in the cruel post-war "DeNazification"
         roundups (for execution) which so upset General George Patton (himself
         murdered by intelligence operatives in 1945.)
 
 - 250 "Ritchie Boys" stayed in spy work and formed the core
         group of the CIA when it was founded in 1947. (that's your "Deep State")
 
 - Most of what
         is now known about the super-secret Ritchie Boys was not declassified until the 1990s.
  *  Though this wasn't mentioned in the 60 Minutes segment
         or the Slimes  puff-piece, we learned that David Rockefeller was also trained at Camp  Ritchie. (here)            	                  The  cruel and cunning Ritchie Boys -- as the 60 Minutes segment confirmed
          -- prepared the fantasy camps to shame the horrified German civilians  who were forced to view "lampshades made from
         Jews" and "Jewish shrunken  heads." The Deep State devils who carried out this cruel hoax went on  to form
         the core of the newly-established CIA, in 1947.
            
           1.  The infamous Nuremberg Show Trials used "confessions" obtained
         by  Ritchie Boys. // 2. The 60 Minutes piece revealed that Julius  Streicher's Ritchie Boy interrogator made sure that Streicher
         knew that  he was Jewish. // 3. Streicher -- who was not even a military man -- was  hanged for "incitement to genocide"
         because he published the newspaper,  "Der Sturmer."
         
           At  the highest levels of the
         psychological warfare efforts, we also find  two of America's top Jewish media moguls of that time. NBC Radio owner
         David Sarnoff, who was born in a small Jewish village in Tsarist Russia, served under General Eisenhower
         as a “Communications Consultant” (psychological warfare). Sarnoff, who had no military experience,
         was later awarded the rank of Brigadier General, and was buried with his medals.
  CBS Radio owner William
         S. Paley  (Paloff) was the son of immigrants who came from the Ukraine region of  the Czarist Russian Empire. During
         World War II, Paley, like Sarnoff,  would also serve under General Eisenhower as a “colonel” in the  Psychological
         Warfare branch of the Office of War Information.
  Between  the pre-CIA Jewish Ritchie Boys in the field; and Jewish
         mega-moguls  Sarnoff & Paloff at the top; and throw in Jewish Hollywood boys  making props and taking films at the internment
         camps --  it's quite  obvious where so many fairy tales of "German atrocities" and "Nazi  confessions"
         originated. The intensive and pervasive psy-op war  propaganda of the time has long since become the "history" taught
         to  subsequent generations. As we've said many times before: "Fake History is the Fake News which has passed
         into the rear view mirror."  
       	 		 			 				 					 						       1891-1971       					 				 | 				 					 						       1901-1990       					 				 | 				 					 						     					 				 | 			  		 	       1. NBC Boss Sarnoff was decorated with the title of "Brigadier General" for his role in psych operations in Europe.
         // 2. CBS  Boss Paley (Paloff) was also
         granted a military title for helping to  orchestrate propaganda and psychological war in Europe. // 3. After the  war, with
         the advent of TV, Sarnoff and Paloff used their WW2 psych war  techniques on to brutally mind rape a new enemy  -- the
         American normie!  (Paloff founded 60 Minutes)     __________________________________________________________________         
          
      
            ____________________________________________________________   How Jews Discredited the Validity of
         the Allied War-Crimes Trials and Buried the Real Story of WWII    
          
          Asked why the Americans didn’t just kill the German war criminals.  Ferencz replied:  “…we don’t do that. We’ll give them a fair trial.”  Robert Kempner stated that
         Nuremberg was  “the greatest history seminar  ever
         held.” In reality, Germans did not receive fair trials, 
         and the  trials they did receive played a major role in establishing the  fraudulent Holocaust story.   Jews
         Discredit Allied War-Crimes Trials The  International Military Tribunal (IMT) at Nuremberg,
         the 12 secondary  Nuremberg trials  (NMT), and numerous other trials are repeatedly cited  as
         proof of the Holocaust  story. For example, Jewish American judge  Norbert Ehrenfreund wrote:   Germans of the 21st century  know what happened during the
         Nazi era because  they learn about it in  school,
         through television programs and various other sources.  And
         this  information did not arise from rumor or questionable hearsay.  Nor was it  a fabrication of the Jewish people, as suggested by some anti-Semitic   factions. Proof of the Holocaust was based on the record of solid  evidence
          produced at the [Nuremberg] trial.[1]   This  article documents some of the Jewish attorneys,
         investigators and  witnesses whose  words and actions prove that the Allied-run war-crimes  trials
         were politically motivated  proceedings which failed to produce  credible evidence of the so-called
         Holocaust.  
 All  the Allied nations in their entirety could not supply sufficient
          numbers of experienced  and qualified gentile staff? Many of the Jews
          employed were highly inexperienced.  For example, Benjamin Ferencz
         was  barely out of law school but, out of all the lawyers  in the U.S.A,
         was  assigned to some of the most prominent international trials in history.   Benjamin Ferencz  Benjamin  Ferencz, a Jewish American
         war-crimes investigator, was born in  Transylvania  and grew up in New York City before earning
         his law degree  from Harvard. He was assigned  to investigate the concentration camps at  Buchenwald,
         Mauthausen and Dachau after the war.[2]   Ferencz states in an interview that he did not have a high opinion  of the Dachau war-crimes trials conducted by the U.S. Army:   I  was there for the liberation, as a sergeant in the Third Army, General  Patton’s Army,  and my task was to collect camp records and witness  testimony, which became
         the  basis for prosecutions…But the Dachau trials 
         were utterly contemptible.  There was nothing resembling the
         rule of  law. More like court-martials.    For  example, they might bring in 20 or 30 people, line them up, each one  with a number  on a card tied around his neck. The court would consist of  three officers. None of them  had any legal education as far as I could  make out; it was coincidental if
         they did.  One officer was assigned as  defense counsel, another
         as prosecutor, the senior one presiding.    The  prosecutor would get up and say something like this: We accuse all of  you of being  accomplices to crimes against humanity and war crimes and  mistreatment of prisoners  of war and other brutalities in the camp,  between 1942 and 1943, what do you
         have to  say for yourself?    Each  defendant would be given about a minute to state his
         case, which was  usually,  not guilty. One trial for instance,
         which lasted two minutes,  convicted 10 people and  sentenced
         them all to death. It was not my idea  of a judicial process.  I
         mean, I was a young, idealistic Harvard law  graduate.[3]   Ferencz further states that nobody including himself
         protested against these procedures  in the Dachau trials.[4] Ferencz later said concerning the military trials at Dachau:   “Did
         I think it was unjust? Not really. They were in the camp;  they saw what happened…But I
         was sort of disgusted.”[5]   
 The  defense counsel at the Mauthausen trial and later trials at Dachau
          insisted that  signed confessions of the accused, used by the prosecution  to great effect, had
         been  extracted from the defendants through  physical abuse, coercion and deceit.[6]  Benjamin Ferencz admits in an interview that he used threats and 
         intimidation to obtain confessions:        
          You know how I got witness statements? I’d go into a village where,  say, an  American
         pilot had parachuted and been beaten to death and line  everyone up  against the wall.
         Then I’d say, “Anyone who lies will be shot on the spot.” 
         It never occurred to me that statements taken under duress would be invalid.[7]   
   Ferencz,  who enjoys an international reputation as
         a world-peace advocate,  further  relates a story concerning his interrogation of an SS colonel.
          Ferencz  explained that he took out his pistol in order to intimidate  him:   What do you do when he thinks  he’s still in charge? I’ve got to
         show him that I’m in charge.  All I’ve  got to
         do is squeeze the trigger and mark it as auf der Flucht  erschossen 
         [shot while trying to escape]…I said “you are in a filthy  uniform sir, take it off!”  I stripped him naked and threw his clothes  out the window. He stood there naked
         for half an hour,  covering his  balls with his hands, not
         looking nearly like the SS officer he was  reported to be. 
         Then I said “now listen, you and I are gonna have an  understanding right now.  I am a Jew—I would love to kill you and mark  you down as auf der Flucht erschossen,  but I’m gonna do what you would  never do. You are gonna sit down and
         write out exactly  what  happened—when you entered the
         camp, who was there, how many died, why  they died,  everything
         else about it. Or, you don’t have to do that—you  are under no obligation— you can write a note of five lines to your wife,  and I will try to deliver it…” [Ferencz
         gets  the desired statement and  continues:] I then went to
         someone outside and said  “Major, I got this  affidavit,
         but I’m not gonna use it—it is a coerced confession.  I
         want  you to go in, be nice to him, and have him re-write it.” The second one  seemed to  be okay—I told him to keep the second one and destroy the  first one. That was it.[8]   The  fact that Ferencz threatened and humiliated his
         witness and reported as  much to  his superior officer indicates that he operated in a culture
          where such illegal methods  were acceptable.[9] Any Harvard-law graduate knows that such evidence is not  admissible in a legitimate court
         of law.  
   an
         SS man and then strap him  to the steel gurney of a crematorium. They slid him  in the oven, turned  on the heat and took him back out. Beat him again, and put  him back in  until he was burnt alive. I did nothing to stop it. I suppose I could   have brandished my weapon or shot in the air, but I was not inclined to  do so.”   Robert Kempner  Robert
          Kempner was the American Chief Prosecutor in the Ministries Trial at  Nuremberg in  which 21
         German government officials were defendants.  Kempner was a German Jew  who had lost his job as
         Chief Legal Advisor of  the Prussian Police Department because  of National Socialist race laws.
          He was forced to emigrate first to Italy and then to the  United States.  Kempner was bitter
         about the experience and was eager  to prosecute and  convict German officials in government service.[10]   Kempner  bribed Under Secretary Friedrich Wilhelm Gaus, a leading official from
          the German  foreign office, to testify for the prosecution in the  Ministries Trial. The transcript
         of Kempner’s  interrogation of Gaus  reveals that Kempner persuaded Gaus to exchange the
         role of defendant   for that of a prosecution collaborator. Gaus was released from isolation 
         two days after his  interrogation. A few days later a German newspaper  reported a lengthy handwritten
         declaration  from Gaus in which Gaus  confessed the collective guilt of the German government
          service. Kempner  had given Gaus’s accusation to the newspaper.[11]   Many  people became critical of Kempner’s heavy-handed interrogation methods.
          In the  case of Friedrich Gaus, for example, Kempner had threatened to  turn Gaus over to the  Soviets unless Gaus was willing to cooperate.[12] American attorney Charles LaFollete  said that Kempner’s
         “foolish,  unlawyer-like method of interrogation was common 
         knowledge in Nuremberg all the time I was there and protested by those of us   who anticipated  the arising of a day, just such as we now have, when the Germans would  attempt tomake martyrs out of the common criminals  on trial in  Nuremberg.”[13]   Kempner  also attempted to bribe German State Secretary
         Ernst von Weizsäcker  during  the Ministries Trial. However, von Weizsäcker courageously
          refused to cooperate.  Richard von Weizsäcker, who helped defend his  father at the trial,
         wrote: “During the  proceedings Kempner once said to  me that though our defense was very
         good,  it suffered from one error:  We should have turned him, Kempner, into my father’s
          defense attorney.”  Richard von Weizsäcker felt Kempner’s words were nothing
          but pure  cynicism.[14]   Dr. Arthur Butz concludes that “there
          are excellent grounds, based on the public record, for believing that  Kempner  abused the power he had at the military tribunals, and produced  ‘evidence’  by improper methods involving threats and various forms of  coercion.”[15]   Torture of Witnesses  Jews  often used torture to help convict the German defendants at Nuremberg  and other  postwar
         trials. A leading example of the use of torture to  obtain evidence is the confession  of Rudolf
         Höss, the former commandant  at Auschwitz. Höss’s testimony at the IMT  was the
         most important  evidence presented of a German extermination program.  Höss said that  more
         than 2.5 million people were exterminated in the Auschwitz gas   chambers, and that another 500,000
         inmates had died there of other  causes.[16]  No  defender of the Holocaust story today accepts these inflated figures,  and other  key portions of Höss’s testimony at the IMT are widely  acknowledged to be untrue.   In 1983, the anti-Nazi book Legions of Death by  Rupert Butler stated that Jewish
         Sgt.  Bernard Clarke and other British  officers tortured Rudolf Höss into making his confession.  The torture of  Höss was exceptionally brutal. Neither Bernard Clarke nor Rupert Butler   finds anything wrong or immoral in the torture of Höss. Neither of them  seems to 
         understand the importance of their revelations. Bernard Clarke  and Rupert Butler prove  that
         Höss’s testimony at Nuremberg was obtained  by torture, and is therefore not credible  evidence
         in establishing a  program of German genocide against European Jewry.[17]   Bernard  Clarke was not the only Jew who tortured Germans to obtain confessions.   Tuviah Friedman, for example, was a Polish Jew who survived the German  concentration 
         camps. Friedman by his own admission beat up to 20 German  prisoners a  day to obtain confessions
         and weed out SS officers. Friedman  stated that “It gave me satisfaction. I
         wanted to see if they would cry or beg for mercy.”[18]   
 Many  of the investigators in the Allied-run trials were Jewish refugees
         from  Germany who  hated Germans. These Jewish investigators gave vent to  their hatred by treating
         the  Germans brutally to force confessions from  them. One Dachau trial court reporter quit his  job because he was  outraged at what was happening there in the name of justice.  He
         later  testified to a U.S. Senate subcommittee that the most brutal  interrogators  had been three
         German-born Jews.[19]    
 Pennsylvania judge Edward L. Van Roden:  “Our investigators would put a black  hood over the
         accused’s head and  then punch him in the face with rubber hose.  Many
         of the German  defendants had teeth knocked out. Some had their jaws broken.   All  but two of the Germans, in the 139 cases we investigated, had been  kicked in the
  testicles beyond repair. This was Standard Operating  Procedure with American investigators.”   In  addition to torturing defendants into making confessions, some  defendants
         did not live  to see the beginning of their trials. For  example, Richard Baer, the last commandant
         of  Auschwitz, adamantly  denied the existence of homicidal gas chambers in his pre-trial   interrogations at the Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial. Baer died in June 1963  under mysterious  circumstances
         while being held in pretrial custody. An  autopsy performed on Baer at the  Frankfurt-am-Main
         University School of  Medicine said that the ingestion of an  odorless, non-corrosive poison 
         could not be ruled out as a cause of death.   It has been widely known ever since the
         illegal abduction of Adolf Eichmann in  Argentina  that the Israeli Mossad has immense capabilities. Given the  fact that Chief
         Public Prosecutor  Fritz Bauer was a Zionist Jew, which  should have precluded him from heading
         the pretrial  investigation, it is  quite possible that the forces of international Jewry were
         able to  murder  Baer in his jail. Conveniently, the Auschwitz Trial in Frankfurt,  Germany began
         almost  immediately after Baer’s death. With Baer’s death  the prosecutors at the
         trial were able to  obtain their primary  objective—to reinforce the gas-chamber myth and
         establish it as an   unassailable historical fact.[20]   False Witness Testimony  False 
         witnesses were used at most of the Allied war-crimes trials. Stephen F.  Pinter served  as a U.S.
         Army prosecuting attorney at the American  trials of Germans at Dachau.  In a 1960 affidavit,
         Pinter said that  “notoriously perjured witnesses” were used to charge  Germans with
         false  and unfounded crimes. Pinter stated,   “Unfortunately, as
         a result of these miscarriages of justice, many  innocent persons were convicted and some were
         executed.”[21]   
 Joseph  Halow, a young U.S. court reporter at the Dachau trials in
         1947,  later  described some of the false witnesses at the Dachau trials:   “[T]he  major portion of the witnesses for the prosecution in the  concentration-camp
           were what came to be known as “professional  witnesses,”
         and everyone working at  Dachau regarded them as such.  “Professional,”
         since they were paid for each day  they testified. In  addition,
         they were provided free housing and food, at a time when 
         these  were often difficult to come by in Germany. Some of them stayed in  Dachau for  months, testifying in every one of the concentration-camp  cases. In other words,  these witnesses made their living testifying for  the prosecution. Usually,
         they were  former inmates from the camps, and  their strong
         hatred of the Germans  should, at the very least, have  called
         their testimony into question.”[22]   An  embarrassing example of perjured witness testimony
         occurred at the  Dachau trials.  Jewish U.S. investigator Josef Kirschbaum brought a  former concentration-camp
          inmate named Einstein into the court to  testify that the defendant, Menzel, had murdered  Einstein’s brother.  Menzel, however, foiled this testimony—he had only to point to  Einstein’s
          brother sitting in the court room listening to the story of  his own murder.  Kirschbaum thereupon turned to Einstein and exclaimed,   “How
         can we bring this pig to the gallows, if you  are so stupid as to bring your brother into the
         court?”[23]    
 
 “How
         can we bring this pig to the gallows, if you are so stupid as to bring your brother into the court?”   The  use of false witnesses has been acknowledged by Johann Neuhäusler,
         who  was an  ecclesiastical resistance fighter interned in two German  concentration camps  from 1941 to 1945. Neuhäusler wrote that in some of  the American-run trials   “many  of the witnesses, perhaps 90%, were paid professional witnesses  with  criminal
         records ranging from robbery to homosexuality.”[24]   
 False  Jewish-eyewitness testimony has often been used to attempt to
         convict  innocent  defendants. For example, John Demjanjuk, a naturalized American  citizen, was
         accused  by eyewitnesses of being a murderous guard at  Treblinka named Ivan the Terrible.  Demjanjuk was deported to Israel, and  an Israeli court tried and convicted him primarily 
         based on the  eyewitness testimony of five Jewish survivors of Treblinka. Demjanjuk’s   defense
         attorney eventually uncovered new evidence proving that the  Soviet KGB had  framed Demjanjuk
         by forging documents supposedly showing  him to be a guard at Treblinka.  The Israeli Supreme
         Court ruled that the  five Jewish eyewitness accounts were not credible,  and that Demjanjuk 
         was innocent.[25]   Another  example of false Jewish testimony of the Holocaust story occurred in  the
         case of  Frank Walus, who was a retired Chicago factory worker  charged with killing Jews in his
          native Poland during the war. An  accusation by Simon Wiesenthal that Walus had worked  for the Gestapo  prompted the U.S. government’s legal action. Eleven Jews testified under   oath during the trial that Walus had murdered Jews during the war.  After a costly four-year  legal battle, Walus was finally able to prove  that he had spent the war years as a teenager 
         working on German farms.  An American Bar Association article published in 1981 concluded   regarding
         Walus’s trial that “…in an atmosphere of hatred and loathing   verging on hysteria,
         the government persecuted an innocent man.”[26]    
   and inflated figures and unusual signatures
         on  non-incriminating pages. Other documents  were created
         to blame Germans  for crimes of the Allies including the Katyn massacre.  Other documents  have been sealed inexplicably for 100 hundred years  Jewish Prosecutorial Role in Trials  A  Russian asked Benjamin Ferencz why the Americans didn’t just kill the  German war 
         criminals. Ferencz replied: “…we don’t do that. We’ll give  them a fair trial.”[27] Robert Kempner  stated that the Nuremberg and other trials resulted in “the greatest
         history seminar ever  held.”[28] In  reality, Germans did not receive fair trials after World War II, and  the trials  they
         did receive played a major role in establishing the  fraudulent Holocaust story.   Jews
         played a crucial role in  organizing the IMT at Nuremberg. Nahum Goldmann,  a former president
         of  the World Jewish Congress (WJC), stated in his memoir that the  Nuremberg  Tribunal was the
         brain-child of WJC officials. Goldmann said that only  after persistent efforts by WJC officials
         were Allied leaders persuaded  to accept the idea of the  Nuremberg Tribunal.[29] The WJC also played an important bu t less obvious role in the day-to-day proceedings in
         the trial.[30]   Two  Jewish U.S. Army officers also played key roles in the Nuremberg  trials. Lt.
         Col. Murray Bernays,  a prominent New York attorney,  persuaded U.S. War Secretary Henry Stimson
         and others  to put the  defeated German leaders on trial.[31] Col.  David Marcus, a fervent Zionist, was  head of the U.S. government’s War  Crimes
         Branch from February 1946 until April 1947.  Marcus was made head  of the War Crimes Branch primarily
         in order “to take over the mammoth   task of selecting hundreds of judges, prosecutors and
         lawyers” for the  Nuremberg NMT Trials.[32]    
    A passage from  a Sept. 25, 1945, letter by U.S. Senator from Connecticut, 
         Thomas J.  Dodd who was the executive trial prosecutor for the U.S.A. Nuremberg.   This  Jewish influence caused the Allies to give special attention to the  alleged extermination  of 6 million Jews. Chief U.S. prosecutor Robert H.  Jackson, for example,  declared in
         his opening address to the Nuremberg  Tribunal:   “The
         most savage and  numerous crimes planned and committed by the Nazis were  those
         against  the Jews…It is my purpose to show a plan and design to which all Nazis   were fanatically committed, to annihilate all Jewish people…The avowed  purpose was  the destruction of the Jewish people as a whole…History does  not record
         a crime  ever perpetrated against so many victims or one ever  carried
         out with such calculated cruelty.”[33]   British  prosecutor Sir Hartley Shawcross echoed Jackson’s
         words in his final  address to  the IMT. Based on Jewish influence, numerous other  Holocaust-related
         trials were later  held in West Germany, Israel and the  United States, including the highly-publicized  trials in Jerusalem of  Adolf Eichmann and John Demjanjuk.[34]   Jewish influence in Germany has resulted in a defendant being assumed to be guilty merely   for being in a German concentration camp during the war. For example,
          after being acquitted  by the Israeli Supreme Court, John Demjanjuk was  charged again on the
         grounds that he had  been a guard named Ivan  Demjanjuk at the Sobibor camp in Poland. On May
         11, 2009,  Demjanjuk was  deported from Cleveland to be tried in Germany. Demjanjuk was convicted
           by a German criminal court as an accessory to the murder of 27,900  people at Sobibor  and sentenced to five years in prison. No evidence was  presented at Demjanjuk’s trial linking  him to specific crimes.  Demjanjuk died in Germany before his appeal could be heard by a 
         German  appellate court.[35]   This  new line of German thinking is breathtaking in its unfairness. It  incorrectly
         assumes  that some German concentration camps were used for  the sole purpose of exterminating
          Jews when, in fact, none of them was.  Moreover, this German law finds a person guilty  merely for being at any
          camp. People can be found guilty of a crime even when no  evidence is  presented that they committed
         a crime. Jewish groups such as the  Simon  Wiesenthal Center have been prosecuting and convicting
         other  elderly  German guards under this line of German legal thinking.[36]    
   Are the Victorious Allied nations themselves now trapped
         in the ‘Nuremberg’ laws?  Today in more than 20 Western  and “Allied” nations it is either explicitly illegal to  question the  Holocaust or indirectly made illegal under ever increasing (and new)   ‘hate’ speech, “racial discrimination” and/or against “human rights”  laws.   Conclusion  The
          IMT and later Allied-run war-crimes trials were a travesty of justice  organized by  Jews who
         wanted to demonize and convict Germans of murder.  These Allied-run trials  were politically motivated
         proceedings that  falsely accused Germans of conducting a  policy of genocide against  European
         Jewry.    
   bare
         the most horrific killing  machine in history and concluded 
         that Jews were primarily responsible  for the Bolshevik Revolution.   Endnotes   [1] Ehrenfreund, Norbert, The Nuremberg Legacy: How the Nazi War Crime Trials Changed the Course of History,
         New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2007, p. 140. [2] Stover, Eric, Peskin, Victor, and Koenig, Alexa, Hiding in Plain Sight: The Pursuit of War Criminals from Nuremberg
         to the War on Terror, Oakland, Cal.: University of California Press, 2016, p. 32. [3] Stuart, Heikelina Verrijn and Simons, Marlise, The Prosecutor and the Judge, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University
         Press, 2009, p. 17. [4] Ibid. [5] Lowe, Keith, The Fear and the Freedom: How the Second World War Changed Us, New York: St. Martin’s
         Press, 2017, p. 198. [6] Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2012, p. 6. [7] Brzezinski, Matthew, “Giving Hitler Hell”, The Washington Post Magazine, July 24, 2005, p.
         26. [8] Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2012, pp. 82-83. [9] Ibid., p. 83. [10] Weizsäcker, Richard von, From Weimar to the Wall: My Life in German Politics, New York: Broadway
         Books, 1997, pp. 92, 97. [11] Ibid., pp. 97-98. [12] Maguire, Peter, Law and War: International Law & American History, New York: Columbia University Press,
         2010, p. 117. [13] Frei, Norbert, Adenauer’s Germany and the Past: The Politics of Amnesty and Integration, New York:
         Columbia University Press, 2002, p. 108. [14] Weizsäcker, Richard von, From Weimar to the Wall: My Life in German Politics, New York: Broadway
         Books, 1997, pp. 98-99. [15] Butz, Arthur R., The Hoax of the Twentieth Century: The Case against the Presumed Extermination of European Jewry,
         Newport Beach, Cal.: Institute of Historical Review, 1993, p. 169. [16] Taylor, Telford, The Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials: A Personal Memoir, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1992,
         p. 363. [17] Faurisson, Robert, “How the British Obtained the Confessions of Rudolf Höss,” The Journal
         of Historical Review, Vol. 7, No. 4, Winter 1986-87, pp. 392-399. [18] Stover, Eric, Peskin, Victor, and Koenig, Alexa, Hiding in Plain Sight: The Pursuit of War Criminals from Nuremberg
         to the War on Terror, Oakland, Cal.: University of California Press, 2016, pp. 70-71. [19] Halow, Joseph, “Innocent in Dachau: The Trial and Punishment of Franz Kofler et al.,” The Journal
         of Historical Review, Vol. 9, No. 4, Winter 1989-1990, p. 459. See also Bower, Tom, Blind Eye
         to Murder, Warner Books, 1997, pp. 304, 310, 313. [20] Staeglich, Wilhelm, Auschwitz: A Judge Looks at the Evidence, Institute for Historical Review, 1990, pp.
         238-239. [21] Sworn  and notarized statement by Stephen F. Pinter, Feb. 9, 1960. Facsimile  in Erich Kern, ed., Verheimlichte Dokumente,
         Munich: 1988, p. 429. [22] Halow, Joseph, Innocent at Dachau, Newport Beach, Cal.: Institute for Historical Review, 1992, p. 61. [23] Ibid, pp. 312-313; see also Utley, Freda, The High Cost of Vengeance, Chicago: Henry Regnery
         Company, 1949, p. 195. [24] Frei, Norbert, Adenauer’s Germany and the Past: The Politics of Amnesty and Integration, New York:
         Columbia University Press, 2002, pp. 110-111. [25] An excellent account of John Demjanjuk’s trial is provided in Sheftel, Yoram, Defending “Ivan the
         Terrible”: The Conspiracy to Convict John Demjanjuk, Washington, D.C., Regnery Publishing, Inc.,
         1996. [26] “The Nazi Who Never Was,” The Washington Post, May 10, 1981, pp. B5, B8. [27] Stuart, Heikelina Verrijn and Simons, Marlise, The Prosecutor and the Judge, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University
         Press, 2009, p. 16. [28] Bazyler, Michael, Holocaust, Genocide, and the Law: A Quest for Justice in a Post-Holocaust World, New
         York: Oxford University Press, 2016, p. 106. [29] Goldmann, Nahum, The Autobiography of Nahum Goldmann: Sixty Years of Jewish Life, New York: Holt, Rinehart
         and Winston, 1969, pp. 216-217. [30] Weber, Mark, “The Nuremberg Trials and the Holocaust,” The Journal of Historical Review, Vol.
         12, No. 2, Summer 1992, p. 170. [31] Conot, Robert E., Justice at Nuremberg, New York: Harper & Row, 1983, pp. 10-13. [32] Butz, Arthur R., The Hoax of the Twentieth Century: The Case against the Presumed Extermination of European Jewry,
         Newport Beach, Cal.: Institute of Historical Review, 1993, pp. 27-28. [33] Office of the United States Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality, Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression (11
         vols.), Washington, D.C.: U.S. Govt., 1946-1948. (The “red series”) / NC&A, Vol. 1, pp. 134-135. [34] Weber, Mark, “The Nuremberg Trials and the Holocaust,” The Journal of Historical Review, Vol.
         12, No. 2, Summer 1992, pp. 167-169. [35] The Dallas Morning News, May 7, 2013, p. 9A. [36] Ibid.     _________________________________________________________________         
         
      
               Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Volume 1 Article 19           >The
         Tribunal shall not be bound by          technical rules of evidence. It  shall adopt and apply  to the  greatest possible extent expeditious  and  nontechnical procedure,           and  shall admit any evidence which  it deems to  be of  probative value.           Nuremberg Trial Proceedings
                  Volume 1 Article 21     >The  Tribunal
         shall not require proof          of facts of common knowledge   but shall take judicial  notice  thereof. It shall  also take judicial  notice of  official           governmental documents and reports  of the United  Nations,   including the acts and documents of the committees set up in the
                   various  allied countries for  the investigation of war crimes,
           and of  records  and  findings military or other  Tribunals          of any
         of the United Nations.       ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________-
         
   
      
      The Einsatzgruppen Trial           
                                                     
                    Historical Background     The Einsatzgruppen trial was the ninth of 12 American-run  trials held after the International  Military Tribunal (IMT) at the  Palace of Justice in Nuremberg, Germany. The trial was  officially titled  “The United States of America v. Otto Ohlendorf et al.” and lasted
         from   September 29, 1947 to April 10, 1948. The court indicted 24 Einsatzgruppen
         leaders  on  three counts of criminality: crimes against humanity, war crimes,
          and membership in  organizations declared criminal by the IMT. Only 22  defendants
         were tried because  one committed suicide and another had to  be excluded for health
         reasons.[1]      Benjamin
         Ferencz, a 27-year-old Harvard-educated attorney, was  appointed by Telford Taylor 
         as chief prosecutor in the case. The  prosecution’s case was based primarily on the  Einsatzgruppen reports his team had discovered in Berlin. Ferencz later said about the  Einsatzgruppen reports:[2]      “So
         we had the names of each town and village, the date, the number  of people killed,  the name of
         the unit, the officer in charge, and other  officers. I sat down in my office  with a little adding
         machine, and I  began to count the people that were murdered in  cold blood. When I  reached a
         million, I said that’s enough for me. I flew from Berlin to   Nuremberg, to see Telford
         Taylor, who by then was a general. And I said,  we’ve got to  put on another trial.”   
             Ferencz said the Einsatzgruppen trial
         would not have taken place if his  team had not had the extraordinary luck of finding
         these reports.[3]      The
         presentation of the prosecution’s evidence lasted less than two days and consisted  mainly of excerpts from the Einsatzgruppen  reports. Ferencz and the four attorneys assisting  him called no  prosecution witnesses and presented no films during the trial. Thus, the   Nuremberg prosecutors set out to prove by documentation alone that the  defendants had  participated in some of the worst crimes of the National  Socialist regime.[4] Since the  Einsatzgruppen reports were crucial to the prosecution’s
         case, we will examine  the validity of these reports.          The Einsatzgruppen
         Reports     The Einsatzgruppen
         sent reports of their activities back to  Berlin by radio. These reports  were
         transcribed and edited by civil  servants and distributed in summary format to non-SS 
         offices such as the  German Foreign Office. None of these  reports exist today
         in the  original—all of them are copies.[5]      That
         the Germans let copies of the Einsatzgruppen reports  fall into the hands of the Allies  is strikingly odd. They could have  easily burned these few stacks of incriminating papers  before the Allies  conquered Germany.[6] The authenticity of the Einsatzgruppen  reports  has also been questioned
         because, like so much other “evidence”  of Nazi atrocities, the documents  emerged
         from the Soviet occupation  zone.[7]         The copies of the Einsatzgruppen reports which have been produced show clear signs of  postwar additions. A typical example is Einsatzgruppen  Report No. 111. Peter Winter writes  that this report contains not only  completely garbled wording, but also a  clear addition to the end of a  paragraph (highlighted in italics below)[8]:      These were
         the motives for the executions carried out by the  Kommandos: Political  officials, looters and
         saboteurs, active Communists  and political representatives,  Jews who gained their release from
          prison camps by false statements, agents and  informers of the NKVD,  persons who, by false depositions
         and influencing witnesses,  were  instrumental in the deportation of ethnic Germans, Jewish sadism
         and  revengefulness,  undesirable elements, partisans, Politruks, dangers of  plague and epidemics,
         members  of Russian bands, armed  insurgents—provisioning of Russian bands, rebels and agitators,
          drifting  juveniles, Jews in general.     
           Dr. Arthur Robert Butz also questions the authenticity  of the Einsatzgruppen reports. Butz writes [9]:      They [the
         documents] are mimeographed and signatures are most rare  and, when they  occur, appear on non-incriminating
         pages. Document  NO-3159, for example, has a  signature, R. R. Strauch, but only on a  covering
         page giving the locations of various  units of the  Einsatzgruppen. There is also NO-1128, allegedly
         from Himmler to Hitler   reporting, among other things, the execution of 363,211 Russian Jews
         in  August-November  1942. This claim occurs on page four of NO-1128, while  initials said to
         be Himmler’s  occur on the irrelevant page one.  Moreover, Himmler’s initials were
         easy  to forge: three vertical lines  with a horizontal line drawn through them.   
             Carlo Mattogno has shown that the figures quoted
         in the  Einsatzgruppen reports are inaccurate. Mattogno writes [10]:      For example,
         in the summary of the activity of Einsatzgruppe A  (October 16, 1941, to  January 31, 1942) the
         number of Jews present in  Latvia at the arrival of the German  troops is 70,000, but the number
         of  Jews shot is reported as being 71,184! Furthermore,  another 3,750 Jews  were alive in work
         camps. In Lithuania, there were 153,743 Jews,  of  which 136,421 were allegedly shot, whereas
         34,500 were taken to the  ghettos at  Kaunas, Wilna, and Schaulen, but the total of those two
          figures is 170,921 Jews!        The
         British trial of German Field Marshall Erich von Manstein in Hamburg, Germany also 
         proved the inaccuracy of the Einsatzgruppen reports. The prosecution’s case was based  on the reports showing that Einsatzgruppe  D under the command of Otto Ohlendorf had  executed some 85,000 Jews in  four and one-half months. Manstein’s defense attorney,  Reginald T.  Paget, wrote that these claims seemed quite impossible[11]:       In
         one instance we were able to check their figures. The S.D.  claimed that they  had killed 10,000
         in Simferopol during November and in  December they reported Simferopol  clear of Jews. By a series
         of cross  checks we were able to establish that the execution  of the Jews in  Simferopol had
         taken place on a single day, 16th November.  Only one  company of S.D. was in Simferopol.
         The place of execution was  15 kilometers from the  town. The numbers involved could not have
         been  more than about 300. These 300 were  probably not exclusively Jews but a  miscellaneous
         collection of people who were being held on  suspicion of  resistance activity…   
          It was indeed clear that the Jewish community had continued to  function quite openly  in Simferopol and although several of our  witnesses had heard rumors about an S.D. 
         excess committed against Jews  in Simferopol, it certainly appeared  that this Jewish community
         was  unaware of any special danger…     By the time we had finished with the
         figures and pointed out the  repeated self-contradiction  in the S.D. reports, it became probable
         that  at least one “0” would have to be knocked  off the total claimed by the  S.D.
         and we also established that only about one-third of  Ohlendorf’s  activities had taken
         place in von Manstein’s area. It is impossible to  know  even the approximate number of
         murdered Jews, for not only was  Ohlendorf lying to  his superiors but as we were able to show,
         his  company commanders were lying to him.        Von Manstein testified that he had no knowledge that Einsatzgruppe D or the German army  had a policy of murdering Jews. The court believed Manstein and found him innocent  of murdering Jews.[12]        Benjamin
         Ferencz’s Credibility     Benjamin Ferencz has made statements that call into question his  independence and  integrity. For example, the defense counsel at the  Mauthausen trial in Dachau insisted  that signed confessions of the  accused, used by the prosecution to great effect, had  been extracted  from the defendants through physical abuse, coercion and deceit. [13] Benjamin Ferencz admits in an interview that  these defense counsel’s claims
         were correct[14]:      You know
         how I got witness statements? I’d go into a village where,  say, an American  pilot had
         parachuted and been beaten to death and line  everyone up against the wall.  Then I’d say,
         “Anyone who lies will be  shot on the spot.” It never  occurred to me that statements
         taken under  duress would be invalid.        In the same interview, Ferencz admits that he observed the torturing  and
         execution of a captured Nazi at a concentration camp[15]:      I once
         saw DPs [Displaced Persons] beat an SS man and then strap him  to the steel  gurney of a crematorium.
         They slid him in the oven, turned  on the heat and took him  back out. Beat him again, and put
         him back in  until he was burnt alive. I did nothing  to stop it. I suppose I could  have brandished
         my weapon or shot in the air,  but I was not inclined to  do so. Does that make me an accomplice
         to murder?        Ferencz, who
         enjoys an international reputation as a world-peace  advocate, further relates 
         a story concerning the interrogation of an SS  colonel. Ferencz explains that he took out his  pistol in order to  intimidate him[16]:      What do
         you do when he thinks he’s still in charge? I’ve got to show  him that I’m 
         in charge. All I’ve got to do is squeeze the trigger and  mark it as auf der Flucht erschossen  [shot while trying to escape]…I  said “you are in a filthy uniform sir, take it off!”
         I stripped  him  naked and threw his clothes out the window. He stood there naked for  half an
         hour,  covering his balls with his hands, not looking nearly like  the SS officer he was  reported to be. Then I said “now listen, you and I  are gonna have an understanding right  now. I am a Jew—I would love to  kill you and mark you down as auf der Flucht erschossen,  but  I’m gonna do what you would never do. You are gonna sit down and write  out exactly  what happened—when you entered the camp, who was there, how  many died, why they 
         died, everything else about it. Or, you don’t have  to do that—you are under no  obligation—you
         can write a note of five  lines to your wife, and I will try to deliver it…”  [Ferencz
         gets the desired statement and continues:]  I then went to someone outside  and said “Major,
         I got this affidavit,  but I’m not gonna use it—it is a coerced confession.  I want
         you to go  in, be nice to him, and have him re-write it.” The second one seemed to   be
         okay—I told him to keep the second one and destroy the first one.  That was it.        Peter Winter asks the question: “Is this the sort of ‘objective’
          legal person who can be relied  upon to produce evidence at a major  trial?”[17]  The fact that Ferencz threatened and  humiliated his witness and  reported as
         much to his superior officer indicates that he operated  in a  culture where such
         illegal methods were acceptable.[18] Any lawyer  knows that such evidence is not admissible in a legitimate court of
         law.        Defendants’ Testimony     Otto Ohlendorf testified at the IMT that Einsatzgruppe D,  the mobile security unit he commanded  in the Crimea between June 1941  and 1942, was responsible for the murder of approximately  90,000 people.  Ohlendorf’s testimony horrified the court and had a depressing effect
          on  the defendants. Dr. Gustav M. Gilbert, the American prison  psychologist,
         wrote that Ohlendorf’s  testimony established “the  inescapable reality
         and shame of mass  murder…by the unquestionable  reliability of a German
         official.”[19]      British
         attorney Reginald Paget, however, questioned the validity of  Ohlendorf’s testimony  at the IMT. Paget wrote: “Ohlendorf had reported  that not only Simferopol but the whole  Crimea was cleared of Jews. He  was clearly a man who was prepared to say anything  that would please his  employers. The Americans, also, had found him the perfect witness.”[20]      Otto
         Ohlendorf at the Einsatzgruppen trial retracted his  earlier testimony at the IMT that  there had been a specific policy to  exterminate Jews on racial or religious grounds. Under  cross  examination, Ohlendorf testified that any Jews or Gypsies killed by his  Group D  were killed as part of anti-partisan activities. Ohlendorf also  testified that only 40,000  people had been executed by his Group D  instead of the 90,000 that he had testified to at the IMT.[21]      Another
         defendant at the Einsatzgruppen trial, Walter Haensch, testified that he knew 
         nothing of the murder of the Jews and denied any criminal wrongdoing by his Kommando   while he was its leader. Haensch claimed he first learned of the murder  of Jews in July 1947  when his interrogator at Nuremberg told him of the  Final Solution. Haensch testified that the  Einsatzgruppen  reports that contradicted his testimony were inaccurate. After the  trial,  Haensch became so obsessed with proving his innocence that he  refused to apply for parole,  hoping that American officials would see  their error and grant him the clemency he deserved.[22]        Benjamin Ferencz claims the Einsatzgruppen reports were definitive proof that the  Einsatzgruppen  had mass murdered Jews. Ferencz states: “There were times when I felt   outraged. For example, the day one defendant, a colonel, said: ‘What,  Jews were shot?
         I  hear that in this courtroom for the first time.’ We  had the records of
         every day that man  was out murdering, and he had the  gall to say that. I was
         ready to  jump over the bar and poke my fingers  into his eyes.”[23]              Michael Musmanno, the presiding judge, provided the defendants with wide latitude in their  presentation of evidence in the Einsatzgruppen trial. However, Ferencz writes  that Musmanno was convinced early on of the defendants’ guilt[24]:      The judge
         handed down worse sentences than I would have imposed. So  he had made  up his mind, early on,
         that he wasn’t going to be deceived.  For him the question was how  to sentence them. He
         was a devout Catholic,  and he went into a monastery for a week  before sentencing. He convicted
          all 22 people, and of these he sentenced 13 to death  by hanging. During  the trial, he had let
         everyone say whatever they wanted to say. He  gave  so much leeway; he was leaning over backwards
         to show the world that it  was a fair trial.           Conclusion      Four Einsatzgruppen units altogether numbering 3,000  men—including non-combat
          troops such as drivers, interpreters, and  radiomen—became operational soon
         after the  German invasion of the Soviet  Union. One of their missions indisputably
         consisted of  fighting against  partisans, and in pursuit of this mission they
         performed numerous  mass  shootings.[25]      The
         official Holocaust historiography, however, claims that the Einsatzgruppen had the  additional task of committing genocide against Soviet Jews. The Einsatzgruppen reports,  which fall into the period from June 1941 to May 1942, are the primary proof of this alleged  genocide. The Einsatzgruppen  reports that have been produced are copies which show  clear signs of  postwar additions, inaccurate and inflated figures, and obscure  signatures  appearing on non-incriminating pages. Such reports would not  constitute  valid
         proof for legitimate historiography or a legitimate  court of law.[26]         The defendants at the Einsatzgruppen trial did not receive a fair hearing. The shootings  carried out by the Einsatzgruppen were not nearly as extensive as claimed at the trial, for  the numbers mentioned in the Einsatzgruppen  reports cannot be objectively confirmed
          and in many cases are  demonstrably exaggerated. These reports provide no basis
         in  justice or  fact to convict the Einsatzgruppen defendants of genocide
         against Soviet Jewry.[27]            Endnotes          	 		
         			| [1] |  			Earl, Hilary, The Nuremberg SS-Einsatzgruppen Trial, 1945-1958, New York: Cambridge University
         Press, 2009, pp. 1, 9-11. |  		  		 			| [2] |  			Stuart, Heikelina Verrijn and Simons, Marlise, The Prosecutor and the Judge, Amsterdam:
         Amsterdam University Press, 2009, pp. 14-15. |  		  		 			| [3] |  			Ibid., p. 14. |  		  		 			| [4] |  			Earl, Hilary, The Nuremberg SS-Einsatzgruppen Trial, 1945-1958, New York: Cambridge University
         Press, 2009, pp. 179-180. |  		  		 			| [5] |  			Winter, Peter, The Six Million: Fact or Fiction?, The Revisionist Press, 2015, p. 24. | 
         		  		 			| [6] |  			Mattogno, Carlo and Graf, Jürgen, Treblinka: Transit Camp or Extermination Camp?,
         Washington, D.C.: The Barnes Review, 2010, p. 204. |  		  		 			| [7] |  			Winter, Peter, The Six Million: Fact or Fiction?, The Revisionist Press, 2015, p. 25 | 
         		  		 			| [8] |  			Ibid., pp. 24-25. |  		  		 			| [9] |  			Butz, Arthur R., The Hoax of the Twentieth Century: The Case against the Presumed Extermination
         of European Jewry, ninth edition, Newport Beach, Cal.: Institute for Historical Review, 1993, p. 198. |  		 
         		 			| [10] |  			Rudolf, Germar and Mattogno, Carlo, Auschwitz Lies: Legends, Lies & Prejudices on the
         Holocaust, Washington, D.C.: The Barnes Review, 2011, p. 243. |  		  		 			| [11] |  			Paget, Reginald T., Manstein: His Campaigns and His Trial, London: Collins, 1951, pp.
         169-172. |  		  		 			| [12] |  			Ibid., p. 174. |  		  		 			| [13] |  			Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2012,
         p. 6. |  		  		 			| [14] |  			Brzezinski, Matthew, “Giving Hitler Hell”, The Washington Post Magazine,
         July 24, 2005, p. 26. |  		  		 			| [15] |  			Ibid. |  		  		 			| [16] |  			Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2012,
         pp. 82-83. |  		  		 			| [17] |  			Winter, Peter, The Six Million: Fact or Fiction?, The Revisionist Press, 2015, p. 24. | 
         		  		 			| [18] |  			Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2012,
         p. 83. |  		  		 			| [19] |  			Earl, Hilary, The Nuremberg SS-Einsatzgruppen Trial, 1945-1958, New York: Cambridge University
         Press, 2009, p. 72. |  		  		 			| [20] |  			Paget, Reginald T., Manstein: His Campaigns and His Trial, London: Collins, 1951, p.
         171. |  		  		 			| [21] |  			Butz, Arthur R., The Hoax of the Twentieth Century: The Case against the Presumed Extermination
         of European Jewry, ninth edition, Newport Beach, Cal.: Institute for Historical Review, 1993, p. 202. |  		 
         		 			| [22] |  			Earl, Hilary, The Nuremberg SS-Einsatzgruppen Trial, 1945-1958, New York: Cambridge University
         Press, 2009, pp. 162-163. |  		  		 			| [23] |  			Stuart, Heikelina Verrijn and Simons, Marlise, The Prosecutor and the Judge, Amsterdam:
         Amsterdam University Press, 2009, p. 19. |  		  		 			| [24] |  			Ibid., pp. 19-20. |  		  		 			| [25] |  			Mattogno, Carlo and Graf, Jürgen, Treblinka: Transit Camp or Extermination Camp?,
         Washington, D.C.: The Barnes Review, 2010, pp. 203, 205. |  		  		 			| [26] |  			Ibid., pp. 203-211. |  		  		 			| [27] |  			Ibid., pp. 208-211. |  
  
      
      
    
   
                 
   
   
      
      
       ____________________________________________________________________________________________    Torture and Testicle Crushing at Nuremberg   			 		
                   		 			. . . by Lasha Darkmoon    Confessions
         at Nuremberg were obtained under torture.  The  grimmest of these
         tortures, practiced mostly by  Jewish operatives on  their German
         prisoners of war,  was testicle crushing.                 German defendants at the Nuremberg War Crimes
         trials,  1946-1949. How many of them had their testicles
         crushed?     “The Holocaust legend is built on ‘confessions’ obtained by the          use of  torture.”  So begins an article that has just been brought to my attention by an unknown emailer.      At the same time, by sheer coincidence, another correspondent
         has just sent me  some stomach-churning details          about
         testicle crushing. He  ends his letter with  these
         words : “This is what Jewish interrogators  did          to their German prisoners  of war after WWII in order to get them to  “sing”—i.e., to confess to crimes they           never committed.”     I  was a bit shocked by these          words.
         To tell the truth, testicle  crushing is not something  I  have thought about a
         great deal, nor do I  wish to dwell too          much on this distasteful subject. 
         I am aware of course  that a  lot of testicle crushing went on at Nuremberg in order to wring            confessions out of the prostrate Germans, but I had been  unaware that   American  Jews had been foremost in the ranks          of these torturers.     Apparently,  as many as three out four      
            interrogators at Nuremberg had  been Jewish—and  these Jewish  interrogators,
         I was to learn to my horror,  had been by          far the most sanguinary  and
         sadistic. There was almost no   level of human depravity to which these monsters were  not
         willing          to  sink, including forcing their German victims to  eat  excrement
         and to  have sex with disinterred corpses.     Yes,  so this is something we ought to bear in mind when watching all  those  Hollywood  movies          celebrating the heroic deeds of the Allies in  World War Two  and lamenting
         the  horrors of the Holocaust : that Jewish  interrogators,          working for
         the Americans, are  known to have beaten,  tortured,  and crushed the testicles
         of German defendants before  charging           them with war crimes at Nuremberg.
         Without these confessions,  obtained  under  extreme torture, there is no solid
         proof that          any Jewish Holocaust  took place at all. There  is only legend,
          hearsay and “eyewitness  accounts” : like those          of Elie Wiesel and his kind— accounts that have  turned out, in  retrospect, to be based on pure fantasy, fiction,  and           grotesque exaggeration.     Proponents  of the official storyline          say that some of the strongest  evidence that
         “proves”  the  Holocaust—i.e. the systematic extermination  
                 of 6 million Jews in gas chambers on the  instructions of  Hitler—consists
          of the supposed “confessions”          of the German officials  who
         were put on  trial at Nuremberg.  What they neglect to tell you is that most of these   confessions          were obtained under extreme torture. Indeed, according to   Jewish investigator  John Sack, torture was often practiced for its own sake,  even when there was nothing  to find out. It was practiced for sheer
          pleasure: because it gave the torturers a          ‘high’, a  feeling
         of sadistic  omnipotence, of orgasmic euphoria.   
          It has since been openly admitted in the memoirs of the top British  official,
         Colonel  Alexander Scotland, who ran          the interrogation program,  that
         thousands of Germans  were tortured by British Military Intelligence,   under the direction of the Prisoner of War  Interrogation Section   (PWIS). This
         torture of German POWs occurred during          the war to  obtain  military intelligence.
         After the war was  over, it was used again in  order to obtain  confessions for
         convictions          of “war crimes”.   
         German  POWs          reported that the torture techniques  included deprivation
         of   sleep, starvation, systematic beatings, ripping  hair from the         
         scalp, menacing with  red-hot pokers, threatened use of   electrical devices
         to deliver shocks, and, finally,  the worst torture          of  all, the slow
         and systematic mangling of the spermatic   cords of the  testicles—a procedure
         that had their victims           thrashing about and  screaming like wild animals
         for hours.      The
         prosecutors at Nuremberg accused and convicted the Germans of  murdering some  4
         million people at Auschwitz.          These charges were based  largely upon the supposed “confessions”  obtained by the torture of  German officers,          such as the signed “confession” by Rudolf Höss,  the commandant at Auschwitz, giving details of how he
         had personally supervised the murder of 2.5          million jews.     In 1989, however, the Soviet government reduced          the claim
         of the number killed at Auschwitz  from 4 million to 1.5 million.
         (See picture below).          This was later reduced to 1 million.            It became apparent at once that if only 1 million Jews had       
           died at Auschwitz, as was now  officially admitted,  it no longer became
         possible to state that 2.5 million Jews had          been  killed  there under Höss while
         he was a commandant there. The  “confession” by Höss          that 2.5 million  Jews had been killed at  Auschwitz  under his auspices was therefore worthless.  It had been a           confession clearly extracted under torture.    If,          moreover, only 1 million Jews perished at  Auschwitz instead
         of  the 4 million  originally claimed to have died  there, it’s       
           obvious that there has been an overestimate  of three million   dead Jews.
          It is no longer possible to assert that 6 million          Jews  died 
         in the Holocaust. That becomes a mathematical  impossibility.     And
                  yet, incredibly, this mathematical impossibility is brazenly  asserted
         to this day in every mainstream media outlet.            We are all expected to pretend that 6 million Jews          minus  3  million Jews somehow  equals 6 million Jews, just as Winston Smith (in  Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four)           was expected to believe that 2 +  2  = 5. Winston Smith, you
         will remember, managed  to believe this  absurdity          in
         the end, with the help of a little extra tuition he  received 
         via the famous “rat torture“.           §   The  startling revelation that          almost all the German  defendants at Nuremberg had  had their  testicles crushed must make us sit  up and think. How can testimonies           obtained under testicle crushing be  regarded in any way as  reliable?     Following reports
         that defendants were tortured at the Malmedy massacre trial,  the  US Army formed the “Simpson Commission” to investigate the
         alleged  misconduct.   Judge Edward L. Van          Roden was part of this
          commission. According to Van Roden’s book,  American
         Atrocities in Germany,           out of 139 cases of treatment of alleged German  “war
         criminals” who  were investigated by the commission—and          who were subsequently  put on  trial by the American Military Tribunal in Dachau after World War II —”137 of these Germans were tortured by having their testicles crushed.”     Other  methods          used by the American interrogators  included brutal beatings,   placing a hood over prisoners and punching  them in the face          with brass knuckles,  breaking their jaws, knocking out  their  teeth, putting them on starvation rations,  and subjecting them          to  solitary confinement. The prisoners were then presented   with prepared  statements to sign. Confess or face          more torture!   
         It emerged that Jewish prosecutors          and interrogators  had obtained complete  control over the US  Military tribunal that was to  put German officials on trial           for war crimes. This is seldom mentioned,  as to do so is  regarded as “anti-Semitic”.
          To state the unvarnished           truth—that 137 Germans had their testicles
         mangled  at  Nuremberg by  largely Jewish interrogators in order to obtain           proof for the  Holocaust—is regarded as “hate speech”.          Lt.
         William Perl was an Austrian Jew  who had emigrated to America in 1940.   He was the          chief interrogator of Germans accused of the Malmedy massacre.  This  was because he could speak fluent German; and indeed many of the  interrogators
         at  Nuremberg were German or Austrian          Jews who had  emigrated to America
         before WWII  and were known as the ‘Ritchie Boys’.  There were roughly
         9000          of these Jews in  America and they specialized in  the “interrogation”
         of German prisoners. (See here).     Perl
          supervised the torture of the German defendants. He          was an  ardent and active  Zionist and was assisted by other  Jews in his  endeavors to extract confessions by  the infliction          of maximum pain. Jews  specalizing in torture techniques at   Nuremberg included  Josef  Kirschbaum, Harry Thon and          Morris Ellowitz. (See here)     This
         is what Wikipedia has to say about the interrogation          of Germans at Malmedy:    “The accusations          [against the German defendants]  were
          mainly based on the sworn  and written statements provided by the  defendants          in Schwäbish
         Hall. To counter the  evidence given in the men’s  sworn statements and by prosecution witnesses,
         the           lead defense  attorney, Lieutenant Colonel Willis M. Everett tried to show  that the  statements had been obtained by inappropriate methods.      Note that exquisite
         euphemism: “inappropriate          methods”. That’s how  respectable, politically  correct Americans refer to confessions obtained  under torture.          The methods are not described
          as horrendously  cruel. They are  not described as morally indefensible.  They are  described          as “inappropriate”.     On  Sept. 25, 1945, Thomas Dodd, who was    
              the second in command on the  American  prosecution team at  Nuremberg, made
         the following observation  in which  he claimed that          three out of
         four interrogators at Nuremberg  were Jewish:    “You  know how I have despised anti-Semitism,” he  said. “You know how   strongly I feel toward          those who preach intolerance  of any kind. With that knowledge,   you will understand when I tell you  that this staff is about seventy-five percent Jewish.”      One  person
         who has made a close          study of the Nuremberg trial archives  in the original  German
          and knows more about this subject than anyone  else I know is          the multilingual  American scholar Carlos W. Porter who is fluent in German, French, Italian, Spanish  and Portuguese. Having renounced
                   his American citizenship in 1984, and having then  relocated to  Belgium
          with his wife and children, the Holocaust revisionist          author of  “Not Guilty at Nuremberg”   took the trouble to write to me about the Nuremberg trials in 
         a  private  communication (July 28, 2015 at          9:55 pm). Porter confirmed what I had  always  suspected: that  most of the American interrogators at Nuremberg  had been Jews,          and that  torture had been freely practiced against the   helpless Germans on trial in order to force
          them to confess to   non-existent          crimes:    “You  can be absolutely CERTAIN,”
                  Carlos Porter  wrote to me, “that nearly ALL  the interrogators
          and interpreters in ALL  the trials were Jewish, because          the  Americans
         stamped out the German  language from all  American schools during  WWI, so German
         Jewish refugees  were almost          the only competent people they  had. Of
         course, other   “German-Americans” could not be trusted not to be “Nazis”,           so they were  stuck with the German Jews.     That
          there          was a great deal of mistreatment and torture in  the minor  trials is  absolutely
         certain. I reproduced a couple of  accounts          of torture at the Dachau  trials
         in “War Crimes Trials and Other   Essays”. But I’m sure it’s only the          tip  of the iceberg. Minor personnel  could be tortured with  impunity, and 99% of  them would be afraid even  to mention it.          It would be hard to get away with  torturing somebody like   Goering though.    There’s
                  a lot of literature on the subject, more all the  time. The  Brits appear 
         to have been surprisingly enthusiastic torturers,           whether Jewish or not.”      Testicle          crushing, incidentally, is a tried and tested method
         for   obtaining confessions.  It was used throughout the Middle Ages and      
             particularly in France during the French Revolution.  That the  Jews, a  scholarly
         race noted for their vast erudition and          academic achievements,   should
         have mastered all the techniques  of testicle crushing is  therefore not surprising.  Their
         talents          for acquiring such outré  information must not  be underestimated.              Though Perl had lots of German blood
         on his hands, he was  nevertheless allowed by  the Americans          to serve
         as a prosecutor at the  Nuremberg War trials. Another Jew of  note at the Nuremberg
         war crimes  trials was Richard          W. Sonnenfeldt. He was the chief   interpreter for  American prosecutors such as Perl. He “interrogated”           some of the most  notorious Nazi leaders of World War II and  died in  2009, age 86, at his home in  Port Washington, N.Y.          (See here)     The
         Presiding Judge at Nuremberg was also—coincidence?—a          Jew. His name was  A.H. Rosenfeld and  he was a colonel in the American army. Col. Rosenfeld cheerfully            admitted to torturing German prisoners of war as a matter of policy. “We  couldn’t
         have  made those birds talk          otherwise,” he remarked cynically. 
         “It was a trick, and it worked like a charm.”     In  a recent private email to me, in response to some of my queries about  torture at  Nuremberg, Thomas Goodrich, acclaimed          author of Hellstorm : The Death of Nazi  Germany (1944-1947),  mentioned the names of four well-known Jews in the American  zone whom  he identified
         as “torturer-inquisitors”          : Harry Thon, William Perl,  AH
          Rosenfeld, and Shlomo Morel.     This last-named individual, Shlomo Morel, was a particularly 
         nasty piece          of work whom Goodrich describes as follows:    “a          vicious monster who drowned men and women in  outdoor
         latrines,  who  made them eat excrement, who personally beat  captives      
            to death, and  who forced women to kiss and make love with   disinterred corpses.”
             (For more grisly details, confirming all this, see here)      After escaping
         from the killing fields          of Germany, where he had taken  immense pleasure 
         in dancing over mounds of corpses and shedding rivers  of human blood,          this cruel psychopath   “lived out his life in comfort and ease in Israel.” Yes,
                  Israel!—the  final bolthole and refuge  dump for many a
         runaway Jew fleeing the long  arm of the law, a place          described in a prescient  comment by Adolf Hitler  as early as 1925 as “a haven for convicted scoundrels           and a university for budding crooks.”  (Mein Kampf, chapter
         11, excerpt.)   §   Here  now are some grisly details about testicle
         crushing that the  reader  may find of some           interest. These distasteful
         details are given  here only  because they are relevant to our  discussion. If
         you are of a  queasy          disposition and prone to easy vomiting, you are advised 
         to skip   the description and stop reading right here. Remember that          all this was  done to  137 Germans at Nuremberg in order to  extract confessions from  them with a view to establishing  the          “truth” about the Holocaust.  Without all that testicle  crushing, the Holocaust might  have been much  harder to          prove.    “Standard  practice [to obtain          castration] in  France
         from the Middle Ages to  the French  Revolution was to crush the  condemned’s
         testicles in a vise,          which  burst them as mush from the  scrotum, then
         crunch the  spermatic cords with pliers.  The condemned was  turned upside  
                down in order to maximize the blood flow  to his brain,  after  which
         he was unable to pass out or enter a  state of shock until,           perhaps,
         the last few seconds of his ordeal.    The  condemned was        
          sure to vomit repeatedly with violent  convulsions, even  well  after he had
         voided the contents of his stomach,  but he rarely          screamed  except
         for an initial shriek, which immediately   silenced, because the pain overwhelmed 
         his ability to breathe. Most          men  would hang and thrash wildly during and  after
         the crushing  of each  testicle, and their thrashing would renew upon  the  
                crushing of each  spermatic cord.    This  torture method (accompanied
                  by others) was usually  reserved for the  crime of regicide or  attempted
         regicide. The condemned  was mercifully put  to death          afterwards, but
         his torture routinely lasted  for the better  part of a day,  witnessed by large
         crowds. It is  interesting          to note that, whereas most crowds  were instructed
         to jeer,   mock, and ridicule the condemned, and did so even  during a   disemboweling,
                  and drawing and quartering, most crowds remained  silent  and  stared
         with shocked expressions as a castration was carried out           in  this manner.   
         Onlookers, male and female, are recorded to  have 
                 vomited at the sight of the spectacle.    
    Yes, they          certainly knew what they were
         doing at Nuremberg! They were the experts.     
          
      
    
   
                 
   
   
      
      
      
 
 ____________________________________________________________     Innocent in Dachau: The Trial
         and Punishment of Franz Kofler et al.  Joseph
         Halow  An unusual set of circumstances, over which I
         had only limited  control, and timing, over which I had no control whatsoever, determined  the course of my military career
         and led me to work as a court reporter  at Dachau for the 7708 War Crimes Group in Germany after my discharge  from the Army.
         Arriving in Germany innocent of war and politics, I found  my preconceptions of right and wrong during wartime, as well as
         the  justice of the postwar trials, challenged by what I observed and  experienced during the Dachau trials. Many years later,
         my review of the  records of those trials has only strengthened my belief that justice  was not served at Dachau after the
         war.  * * * * *  The war with Japan ended on August 15, 1945, and I reached the age of  eighteen on August 20, 1945. Unhappy with
         my life in a small city in  Pennsylvania and sure I would in any event soon be drafted into the  army, when I registered for
         the draft on my eighteenth birthday I asked  for immediate induction. I could not have enlisted, since this would  have required
         parental permission, and the death of my eldest brother in  Italy during the war against Germany had so profoundly affected
         my  parents they would not have considered granting it. My mother,  grief-stricken, could only proclaim that had George enlisted
         and not  been drafted she would have felt she had sent him to his death.  The Army moved as rapidly on my request for immediate induction as a  Federal bureaucracy is able. In this case it
         wasn't until October 23,  1945 before I was taken into the Army. This worked in my favor, for by  fall the nation had such
         a backlog of servicemen awaiting discharge that  thousands of men remained on terminal leave for weeks until the  military
         service groups were able to process them.  I learned of the
         Army's desperate manpower situation within a few  short days of my induction. At Fort Meade, Maryland, where each day  thousands
         were being separated from the service, anyone with any office  training whatsoever was immediately pulled from the ranks of
         the other  recruits and put to work in Army Administration. The plan was to send  these new recruits to basic training camps
         later, after the Army had  been able to effect the discharge processing of so many World War II  veterans.  I had grown up in Pennsylvania during the Great Depression, and,  because
         of my father's heart condition, which would not permit him to  work, we were probably even poorer than many of our neighbors.
         It never  occurred to me that I would ever attend a university. I elected to  pursue a commercial course in high school, so
         that I could have a  well-paying job as soon as I graduated and I could begin a business  career. Excelling in my studies,
         I broke the high school speed record in  shorthand by passing a speed test at 175 words per minute. 
         This ability determined the course of my military service for the  next two and a
         half years. I was not sent to a basic training camp but  instead was put to work in G-4, the administrative office at Fort
         Meade.  Hopelessly lost at a desk at which I was expected to work independently  -- for I had no experience and I received
         virtually no guidance  whatever -- I was pleased when, after only two or three weeks, I was  asked to serve as a reporter
         on Army Retiring Board cases. The work was  much easier than office administration, in which I was charged with  responding
         to correspondence which I was unable to understand. Reporting  required no experience, although attempting to record the proceedings
         faithfully is obviously stressful. This assignment lasted less than two  months, for on my return to base from a Christmas
         furlough I learned  that I was one of two enlisted men selected to go to China.  Chosen on the spur of the moment, we flew to China in propeller  planes, and even under the A-1 priority assigned
         our travel, it was a  week before we arrived in the city now called Beijing. We learned that  our mission was to establish
         offices which would administer the  negotiations the United States was then mediating between the Communists  and the Nationalists.
         Today it is difficult for me to imagine the  extent of my political naiveté during the time I was stationed in China.
         The intent of our mission there I found incomprehensible. It may have  been because we were an immigrant family, but at home
         in Pennsylvania,  before I entered the Army, I was not at all interested in even American  politics. At that time I could
         not have distinguished between the  Republicans and the Democrats. In China, although I worked in the  Commanding General's
         office and had access to every bit of information  available, no matter how highly classified it was, I failed to  understand
         the differences between the Chinese Nationalists and the  Communists. It seemed obvious to me then that we favored the  Nationalists,
         but it was not until much later that I understood the  reasons for establishing the Peiping Headquarters Group, as our outfit
         was named.  When I arrived in China I had been in the Army
         exactly two and a half  months, and I was still completely lost in an office. Thanks to my  buddy Smitty's administrative
         abilities and his experience, we soon  earned a good reputation and were highly regarded by officers and the  enlisted men
         alike.  My tour in China ended on the termination of the
         six-month period of  temporary duty. Although Smitty and I could have stayed on, both of us  elected to return. We were ordered
         to Washington, D.C., and there  assigned to the Office of the Chief of Staff, Europeari Division, at the  Pentagon.  After months of bored inactivity at the Pentagon, I was discharged  from
         the Army on December 2, 1946. I longed to see more of the world,  and sought a job with the Department of the Army abroad.
         Since I was  still only nineteen, however, I was considered to be too young for  overseas employment as a civilian. I argued
         that I had been overseas in  the Army, where I had to manage essentially alone. The Civilian  Personnel office agreed (probably
         because of the shortage of shorthand  reporters in the European Theater). Despite my trepidation about being  assigned to
         Germany, I left New York on the S.S. Marine Angel on  December 10, 1946, and arrived in Bremerhaven, Germany, on
         December  21st. From there I traveled to Augsburg, where I awaited assignment as a  pre-trial reporter on a war-crimes investigating
         detachment. There were  at least fourteen such detachments, and each of them was to assign its  own pre-trial reporter.  The first few months I spent in Germany were particularly unpleasant,  due
         to an unusually severe winter and a shortage of fuel. We Americans  had to cut back on our use of heating fuel, and so we
         were constantly  cold, inside as well as outside our quarters. If our fuel rations were  limited, rations for the Germans
         simply did not exist, and I later  learned that they would frequently awaken to find frost on their inside  walls, which remained
         frigid all day.  When the pre-trial detachments had finished
         their work, I was  transferred to Dachau, to serve as an official reporter in the American  trials at Dachau. The German cities
         I had seen had been so thoroughly  destroyed by Allied bombers that it was a pleasure for me to come to  Dachau. There, although
         one could purchase nothing in any of the shops,  the buildings were at least intact. The summer of 1947, following the  extremely
         cold winter, was also unusually warm and sunny, with mild  weather which lasted through the fall. This made living conditions
         in  Dachau very pleasant for me, though this contrasted starkly with the  gloom involved in the cases we tried in court.  * * * * *  So
         many years have passed since the war crimes trials that I should  perhaps explain that my unit, the 7708 War Crimes Group,
         was assigned  the function of administering and holding the war crimes trials which  took place under the aegis of the American
         military government in  Dachau, Germany. This included trials of cases involving concentration  camps in Germany and Austria,
         as well as trials of isolated atrocity  cases. The latter involved the fates of crews from American planes shot  down during
         bombing raids over Germany. Fliers forced to parachute from  their disabled planes were often attacked by civilians from the
         towns in  which these bombing raids had taken place. The enraged German civilians  would then kill the unfortunate fliers,
         either by beating to death or  shooting them, sometimes both.  It
         was on one of these atrocity cases that I was tested for my  ability to report officially. Working with an experienced official
         reporter, I was to sit through the trial in order to understand and  learn the procedure. I then had to record and transcribe
         the proceedings  of one official court session or "take," a period of approximately one  and a half hours in court.
         Had I failed the test, I would doubtless have  been transferred to some other function. I did pass the test, which  proved
         to be more trying to my emotions than to my skill as a reporter.  I might have been indifferent regarding this trial had it not been  for a young "accused" (as we called
         the defendants), who sat in the dock  with several other, appreciably older, German civilians. He was so much  younger than
         the others that I took note of him as soon as I entered  the courtroom. I watched him throughout, and, undoubtedly because
         he  sensed I was his peer, he watched me. Checking the record, I learned  that the defendant, Rudolf Merkel, was six months
         younger than I; I was  still only nineteen. The crime for which he was being tried had taken  place when he was fifteen, when
         the other accused had attacked a flier  who had parachuted into an area close to his town. Two of the older men  had struck
         the flier, and on their instruction, Merkel had struck him  twice with a stick.  My excitement during the proceedings had grown to a fever pitch by  the time the court announced its sentences. When
         young Rudolf Merkel was  sentenced to life imprisonment I was stunned. On hearing his sentence,  young Merkel broke down.
         Tears streamed down his face, and he shook as  he fought back the sobs which tore through his body. Throughout the  trial
         I had sympathized with the murdered flier, my countryman, and had  been deeply shaken to hear of his pathetic attempts to
         escape the  attacks of the infuriated German townspeople. Now I was struck by the  plight of this boy, and I had to look away
         to avoid crying with him.  Listening to the testimony, I had already concluded that in his shoes I  would have acted, despite
         my peaceful nature, as he had. Going a step  further, I soon realized that had this happened in America those who had  disposed
         of an enemy flier would have been considered heroes. We, the  victors, considered them lawless criminals. I came to the conclusion
         that in such cases it is invariably the winners who determine whether  those involved are heroes or terrorists.  After I had transcribed this testimony, I was told I had passed the  test.
         My response was to say that I did not feel I was emotionally able  to work in court. After three days, however, I realized
         that I had very  little choice. I was under contract with the 7708 War Crimes Group as a  reporter (technically a pre-trial
         reporter). To the best of my  knowledge, there was no other position available to me. I returned to  work, where, after my
         baptism of fire, I soon adjusted. I could listen  to the sentences given the accused, even when I thought they were harsh,
         without ever again having to battle tears on their behalf. Then again,  Rudolf Merkel was the youngest accused whose trial
         I recorded (I learned  later that he was the youngest prisoner interned at Landsberg prison).  * * * * *  Merkel's case was
         not the only trial I remember clearly. There were  others that have stayed in my memory, either due to the crimes alleged,
         the sentences handed down, or simply the notoriety the case had gained.  Some cases I remembered only for specific details,
         sometimes personal  but more often regarding one or another of the accused. It was not until  recently, however, following
         the declassification of the American  military court files, that I was able to gain access to them. (They are  held by the
         National Archives Records Administration at the Washington  National Records Center in Suitland, Maryland.) What a thrill
         it was to  look through the documents I had myself prepared more than forty years  ago! The files served not only to confirm
         my recollections, but enabled  me to review the complete documentation pertaining to the individual  cases, including the
         reports of the review authority and subsequent  correspondence.  When
         I started my review, I quickly checked the file on Rudolf  Merkel. I discovered that he had been released from prison after
         serving  seven years. I noted that his release was based on the same thing that  had led me, long ago, to feel such pain at
         his sentence: his extreme  youth. When his case came under review, his German counsel presented a  strong statement on his
         behalf, indicating other instances in which,  moved by political expediency, the Americans had excused the actions of  boys
         slightly older than Rudolf Merkel was when he struck the fallen  American. On his release, Merkel, who came from a village
         close to the  French border, returned home, married and reared a family.  Apart from satisfying my curiosity, my review of the files allowed me  to gain greater insight into the cases than
         was possible during my time  in Dachau. My review of the files aroused my interest in writing about  my experiences in Dachau.
         which involved reporting the trials of guards  and Kapos at Mauthausen, Buchenwald, and their various subcamps, or  Kommandos.  The isolated flier case had been particularly difficult for me to  endure,
         since it was much easier to identify with a single victim,  usually an American, known by name, rank and serial number. The
         concentration camp cases provided a different challenge, since they  involved many victims not identified by name or nationality.
         The  witnesses in the concentration camp cases were virtually all of the sort  we court reporters termed "professional
         witnesses," those who spent  months in Dachau, testifying against one or another of the many accused.  They were fed
         and housed by the Americans at Dachau in comfort they  could never have hoped to attain elsewhere in Germany in those days.
         They were also paid a fee for each day they spent at court. Thus it was  to their economic advantage to testify, and many
         of them made a good  living doing so.  As one might well
         imagine, the motive of the professional witnesses  was also one of spite and revenge. Those of them who had been in the  concentration
         camps hated the Germans and would have done anything to  harm them. In many instances their vengeance included relating  exaggerated
         accounts of what they had witnessed. It also included  outright lying.  To complicate matters even further, those who investigated the cases  and brought them to court were often untrained.
         Their major  qualification for these jobs was that they spoke German. In most  instances this was not difficult for them,
         since, as Jewish refugees  from Germany, German was their mother tongue. Virtually all of these  investigators also hated
         the Germans, as did a large portion of the  professional staff assigned to work in the courts. Many of the  investigators
         gave vent to their hatred by attempting to force  confessions from the Germans by treating them brutally. This frequently
         emerged in the testimony of some of the accused in the court  proceedings, and the accompanying documents in the files contain
         allegations of instances of severe beatings of the accused by some of  these investigators. The most famous example of this
         brutality was in  connection with the interrogation of the suspects in the "Malmedy Case,"  and was confirmed by
         the Army's review board. The military courts, set  up as court martial, tended, however, generally to believe those who  made
         the accusations, paying scant attention to testimony by and for the  accused.  A popular accusation against an accused in the concentration camp  case was that he had "so severely beaten
         prisoners that they died."  Initially the "witnesses" were not even required to identify prisoners  who had
         been so killed. Such accusations were responsible for many of  the sentences which sent 229 of the 925 individuals accused
         in the 332  concentration camp cases to hang at Landsberg. Death sentences were, in  fact, quite usual, as were sentences
         of life imprisonment.  There were also strong indications
         that the professional witnesses  worked together, helping each other with their testimony. The witnesses  would frequently
         attend sessions in a court trial, following which they  would relate to their friends what had transpired. This helped their
         friends prepare for their own testimony.  The professional
         witnesses were known to the authorities in  Washington, as is proved by a memorandum for the Judge Advocate  General's Office
         in the Pentagon, speaking of a professional witness  whose testimony was to be considered to be "unreliable." A
         note in the  review of "The United States vs. Lauriano Navas, et al." (file no. 000-50-5-25) states that:  A memorandum for the Chief of the War Crimes Branch,  European
         Command, dated 2 April 1951, states that Pedro Gomez, although  never officially declared unreliable, definitely falls into
         the class of  a "professional witness" and that testimony from him should be  considered with caution and given
         little weight unless corroborated.  
   This
         admonition from the Office of the Chief of the War Crimes  Branch, European Command, came unfortunately too late to have had
         any  bearing during the war crimes trials, all of which were complete by the  end of 1947. The sentences meted out by the
         courts and the subsequent  documents prepared by the review authority demonstrate what I was able  to observe, that there
         was very little caution applied in the acceptance  of such testimony.  One of the factors which disturbed me the most in the concentration  camp cases was the "common cause"
         finding by one of the courts, to the  effect that anyone who had been in a position of any authority within a  camp or any
         of its subcamps had to have known what was transpiring in  that camp and was, as a result, guilty of participation in a common
         cause. This finding struck me even then as being grossly unjust, since  there are various reasons why one remains at a specific
         post. This  awakens the age-old argument about whether one follows commands and  performs what he is ordered to do or whether
         he follows the dictates of  his own conscience. It is obvious that in such instances such a choice  would have been very difficult
         even in the United States (witness the  plight and the shame suffered by the conscientious objectors in the  United States
         during World War II and the cases of those who would not  fight in Vietnam during the Vietnamese war). In a dictatorship such
         as  the Third Reich, the latter choice would have meant certain death.  * * * * *  One of the most memorable war crimes
         trials on which I worked was a  subsidiary trial of the parent Mauthausen trial. I remember it vividly,  despite its similarity
         to the other subsidiary concentration camp trials  which I recorded; there was the usual intervention of professional  witnesses
         and their confusion on the stand, leading, nevertheless, to  the sentencing of the accused. What impressed me about this particular
         case was not so much the sloppy trial proceedings, the professional  witnesses or any other aspect of the case, but the intervention
         of one  witness and a single incident about which she testified. Her name was  Danuta Drbuszenska. I still can see, in my
         mind, this young, blond,  pretty Polish girl. Even her name fascinated me: a jumble of consonants  so difficult to type I
         could not have forgotten it or her.  As in the other subsidiary
         Mauthausen Concentration Camp trials, the  chief prosecutor required the court to take cognizance of the decision  rendered
         in the parent Mauthausen case, "that the mass atrocity  operation was criminal in nature and that the participants therein,
         acting in pursuance of a common design, subjected persons to killings,  beatings, tortures, etc., and [the court] was warranted
         in inferring  that those shown to have participated knew of the criminal nature  thereof." The court indicated that those
         convicted in this case would  also be considered part of this finding.  The trial was designated as "The United States vs. Franz Kofler et al."  Originally there were
         eleven accused. Kofler himself was not a German  but an Austrian. The other seven accused included two men, Michael  Heller
         and Stefan Lennert, who had been born in Rumania but were Volksdeutsche,  ethnic Germans. These men served in the
         German Schutzstaffel (SS) but  their foreign nationality posed no problem for them, since the Volksdeutsche were
         considered German despite having been born outside Germany proper. Another of the accused was Gustav Petrat, a Lithuanian
         Volksdeutscher,  a German born in Lithuania and a citizen of that country until he  became a German citizen in 1942.
         Gustav Petrat was also a member of the  SS.  The other four
         were German nationals, apparently born in Germany, who  gave home addresses in Germany. These other Germans accused were 
         Hermann Franz Buetgen, Quirin Flaucher, Arno Albert Reuter and Emil  Thielmann.  Danuta Drbuszenska was the first witness, called to the stand by the  prosecution. Because she was Polish, the proceedings
         had to be  translated twice, leaving me, the first reporter to begin recording  testimony in this case, more time than usual
         to observe. I noted that  she was of about medium height, blue-eyed as well as blond, with a pale  oval face on which she
         used no makeup whatever. Drbuszenska was slim,  and she wore a simple, pale pink cotton summer dress with a small print, 
         very light in color, indicating frequent laundering. In 1947 she was,  as she testified, only twenty-one, little more than
         two years older than  I.  Danuta Drbuszenska had been taken
         prisoner in Warsaw when she was  only sixteen. After a brief stay at an internment camp at Lodz, Poland  (then called Litzmannstadt
         and annexed by Germany), she was moved to the  Mauthausen Concentration Camp complex. She and a group of other Polish  women
         had, I understood, been housed in a barracks which the SS had  turned into a brothel. This brothel served the German military
         on duty  at the camp, as well as those inmates who could pay for such benefits or  were being rewarded for some service to
         the camp.  Apart from her physical good looks, I was immediately
         taken by  Drbuszenska's calm manner from the moment she entered the court room to  take the witness chair. Her simple dress
         gave her a casual look. Her  manner of speaking, in a very measured and even tone, was unhurried,  giving the impression that
         she had all her thoughts collected and  perfectly in order. I could not help but be impressed by her, and it was  obvious
         that the court was as well. Hearing her testimony, taken in  direct examination, I was convinced that her appearance would
         suffice to  have Gustav Petrat, against whom she testified, sentenced to hang.  Drbuszenska's speech conveyed the impression that she was not aware  of the severity of the statements she made,
         nor did she seem to notice  the impression they were making on the court. She remained the coolest,  most matter-of-fact witness
         of all those whose testimony I recorded in  Dachau, even when presenting the lurid details of the incidents to which  she
         testified. Drbuszenska remained unshaken even during the defense  counsel's cross-examination. She appeared to have taken
         no note of me,  but I watched her closely as she testified.  After
         giving her name, age, address and occupation (translated as  "tailor" but which must have been "seamstress"),
         Drbuszenska was asked  if she knew any of the accused in the case. She promptly responded that  she knew "number six,
         Petrat." She said she knew another man but that he  was not among the accused. She subsequently stated that she was to
         serve as a witness in another of the subsidiary camp case trials.  Drbuszenska testified that at Mauthausen she and the other women  prisoners had to carry heavy rails, so heavy that
         it took five women to  carry one. She stated that Petrat was the "SS man who was in charge of  the lot of us," and
         she quickly came to the main points in her testimony  by stating that whenever they went to the washroom he would beat them.
         Drbuszenska said that Petrat had first of all singled her out, for what  reason she did not know. She stated that as the prisoners
         were gathering  on the roll call square "to go to work," a report was made by the block  eldest, a women, and Drbuszenska
         was "fetched out." Drbuszenska  testified that Petrat had then struck her on the inside of the upper arm  with a
         club constructed of wood and iron, leaving a scar about four  inches long and about one inch wide. At the prosecution's request
         she  arose calmly from the witness' chair and walked coolly toward the  members of the court, where she slowly raised her
         right arm, turning so  that each could see the scar on the inner side of the upper arm. The  club, she testified, was about
         two and a half feet long and about as  thick as her right wrist.  Following this, the witness then testified, the accused took her  "back to his apartment," where he first
         grabbed her by the pigtails and  gave her a beating. He then took her by her pigtails, winding them  around his hands, and
         raised and lowered her until she fainted. While  she was unconscious, Drbuszenska added, Petrat had taken her "hands
         back  and tied them behind my back and up on a stake," where he let her hang  for half an hour. 
         Drbuszenska said she regained consciousness only when she was back in  the prisoners'
         block. She testified further that "My girl friends told  me afterwards that I had been hanging for half an hour, but
         I couldn't  say because I had been unconscious and I don't know if he went on  beating me or not." (I was so absorbed
         by this girl and her manner that I  did not then notice the similarity between her statements about being  picked up and lowered
         by her hair and a statement made by Moses  Meschel, a Polish Jewish witness in the subsidiary Mauthausen trial of
         the four Spanish kapos, who stated that he had been picked up by his ear  and then thrown to the floor, where he landed on
         the ear by which he  had been originally lifted!)  Something
         which did not occur to me then is that Drbuszenska was  never asked how her friends knew she could have been hanging for a
         half  an hour. She herself could hardly have even known that Petrat had hanged  her by her pigtails, since, according to her
         own statement, she had  fainted before all this had happened, and, according to her own  statement, regained consciousness
         only after her return to the  prisoners' block. Only she and Petrat were present in what she said was  his apartment, where
         all this was purported to have taken place. This  glaring inconsistency appeared not to have troubled the court at the  time.
         I recall only that I briefly questioned the statement in my own  mind, but then forgot it because what then transpired in
         the court  seemed to me bizarre.  When Drbuszenska began
         the account of her alleged mistreatment, I  looked at Petrat, the man she was accusing, and saw he was blushing a  deep red!
         The former SS man looked down at the floor, then looked up  again. He had a sheepish grin on his face, and looked for all
         the world  like a foolish young boy caught with his hand in the cookie jar, as  though he had merely committed some petty
         misdemeanor!  The contrast between the two of them was startling,
         as though they  had switched roles: the girl testifying was so calm and composed as to  seem hard, unpressed by concern or
         any apparent emotion, while the look  on the face of the man she was accusing was absolutely adolescent, if  not actually
         puerile. I don't know if any of the court members noticed  his discomfort, but I immediately guessed that there had been,
         not  cruelty, but deep intimacy between the two. To me Petrat's blush  confirmed this.  Asked if she had ever again been personally mistreated by Petrat,  Drbuszenska responded "After
         that he didn't hit me any more because I  used to say to him 'Well, when the Americans come you will be finished  in any case,'
         and he used to say 'No, you will be finished before me.'"  This type of exchange between a reputedly tough SS non-com,
         charged with  guarding prisoners at a concentration camp, and a young and attractive  female prisoner would have been incomprehensible
         to me if they had not  been lovers. I was young, but not that young, and I couldn't forget that  at the time she was in the
         camp she had been my age. Had Petrat so  disliked Drbuszenska (which was unbelievable to me), he would have been  more apt
         to strike her or to ignore her rather than have spent time in  adolescent chit-chat about who would be "finished"
         first and whether or  not this would be before or after the Americans liberated the camp.  My speculation was interrupted by the further questioning of  Drbuszenska. The prosecutor's
         next question was "Now, do you know of any  mistreatment of any other prisoners at Mauthausen by Petrat?" She  responded
         "Yes." When asked to tell the court about it, Drbuszenska  testified that she and her friend Zilenska were helping
         another friend,  Wisniewska, who, because of a hernia, had been unable to walk alone to  the washroom which they used. When
         they arrived there Petrat was  standing on top of a barrel, with another SS man, against whom  Drbuszenska had also "brought
         some charges somewhere else." Since  Wisniewska could not walk unaided, Drbuszenska stated, Petrat struck her  on the
         head with the same club with which he had earlier hit  Drbuszenska, so hard that "all the brains came out and there was
         so much  blood flowing about so that two SS men got two prisoners to clean up  the blood and put her on a stretcher and carried
         her to the crematory.'  When she was asked if her friend
         had been dead when she was carried  away, Drbuszenska responded by saying "She was dead and she couldn't be  anything
         else except dead because when he hit her all her brains had  fallen out. She fell to the ground and didn't get up any more.
         We stood  and cried." All this she recounted in the same, unbelievably calm  manner, without any break in her voice,
         any change in the volume or the  rate of speed at which she spoke.  Since their friend Wisniewska had been taken to the crematorium,  Danuta Drbuszenska continued, she and her friend
         Zilenska picked up  their towels and returned to the prisoners' block, exiting through a  door which led directly into their
         block. Danuta and Zilenska then went,  with another friend, to the crematorium, and with her two friends  acting as look-outs
         for her, Danuta walked quietly over to the  crematorium window and watched as Wisniewska's body was "put on a huge, 
         what you might call a tray, and shoved inside the stove to be burned."  She reported that there were more people there,
         "and I saw how he  [Petrat] was rushing them onward. He said 'Hurry up, hurry up!' There  was a five-minute alert and
         the Americans were to come in pretty soon."  Drbuszenska stated that this incident had taken place on April 15, 1945,
         approximately three weeks before the Americans arrived at the camp.  During cross-examination, the defense counsel, Major William Oates,  asked Drbuszenska if at the time Petrat struck
         her she did not have  something in her hands. She responded that she had been holding a  carrot, which she had stolen. The
         block eldest had seen her steal the  carrot, and it was for this reason that she had been beaten. In response  to further
         questioning by the defense counsel, Drbuszenska said that it  was at their place of work where Petrat had struck her and,
         when asked  to indicate approximately where Petrat was standing when he struck her,  she indicated that it was about a foot
         and a half to the left (the scar was on her right arm). She then added quickly that when she saw him about to strike
         her she had raised her arm to scratch her head [emphasis provided by the author]!  The defense counsel asked Drbuszenska if she had ever had a love  affair with Petrat (which
         confirmed my own feelings about what might  have been the case). She did not answer this question but responded  instead by
         saying, again coolly, "I would kill him if I could!" The next  question was "And at the time he struck you
         with this object, that was  what you were trying to do, wasn't it?" Drbuszenska responded "What he  was after was
         that I was swearing at him because I didn't want to have  anything to do with him, and when he passed I didn't even say 'Good
         morning' to him." The defense counsel then asked her, "You had been  stealing food stuffs from other inmates and
         this wasn't the first time  that you had stolen from your fellow countrymen, was it?" The  prosecution objected to the
         question, but the court president overruled  the objection. The witness responded "No, we were going to peel potatoes
         and I picked up this carrot while peeling potatoes, so it is quite  untrue."  There was another accusation brought against Petrat which I still  recall, although not with the same prurient interest.
         This was a  statement made by Andor Fried, a seventeen-year-old Polish Jew. Fried  was one of several witnesses who testified
         that Petrat had accompanied a  long column of prisoners walking to Gunskirchen from Mauthausen during  the last several days
         of the war. He appeared to be uncertain in his  identification of Petrat, since the man he saw was following the  procession
         at a distance of about one and a half city blocks. Fried  asserted, nevertheless, that it had been Petrat, and he described
         how he  saw Petrat, at such a great distance, had been killing stragglers or  those who had fallen in the ditches by the wayside.
         Later in the trial,  Andor Fried was recalled triumphantly by the prosecution to testify  that, during a court recess, he
         had passed relatively close to the  accused, who were then in the hall, and that Petrat had called him a  "jüdisches
         Schwein!" (Jewish swine).  If Andor Fried was lying,
         and his story indicates he was at least not  sure what he was saying was exact, Petrat might have been so offended  by his
         statements, either untrue or at least exaggerated, that he could  have called him a "jüdisches" or
         any other kind of a swine. But a  witness who will lie about one thing can be counted on to lie again,  and it is possible
         that Petrat never said anything of the kind to Fried.  At that time, however, no one would have dared question such an  accusation
         made by a concentration camp survivor.  The accusation that
         Petrat had been following the forced march was  thoroughly refuted -- or at least cast in doubt -- by the witnesses for  the
         defense. These witnesses said that Petrat could not have been  accompanying the transport, since it was not his function.
         They pointed  out that Petrat had been assigned to the Mauthausen Camp because he had  been wounded so severely on the Russian
         front that he was no longer fit  to fight. His physical condition would not have permitted him to ride a  motorcycle. One
         of the defense witnesses said that the prosecution  witnesses might have mistaken Petrat for Hans Altfuldisch, who had been
         tried and sentenced to death in the parent Mauthausen case.  Prosecution
         witnesses further testified that Petrat had beaten and  killed inmates working at the stone quarry. He was accused of once
         having killed a fallen inmate by stamping on his head. Petrat was a dog  leader, i.e., one who guarded work crews outside
         the camp with a leashed  dog, and his dog was described as a savage animal, which tore pieces of  flesh out of the inmates
         when she bit them.  Defense witnesses, on the other hand,
         testified that Petrats dog was a  fat and lazy bitch, which might have threatened but would not attack.  They also testified
         that Petrat would never have been permitted in the  camp where the inmates were housed; yet, according to Drbuszenska, he
         was frequently in their washroom, which she herself admitted men were  not permitted to enter.  The court evidently accepted the testimony of Drbuszenska, as well as  the charges by some of
         the other witnesses. It found Petrat guilty and  sentenced him to death by hanging. This did not surprise me at the time,
         for I had expected it ever since I had heard Danuta Drbuszenska's  initial testimony.  The testimony presented against Quirin Flaucher, a prisoner,  condemned him just as quickly
         as that against Petrat had condemned him.  In Flaucher's case, however, testimony was presented by at least one  credible
         witness, Jean Loureau, who had already testified in the  Lauriano Navas case. He traveled to Germany from France once again
         for  the Kofler trial. Loureau testified that Flaucher had been the block  eldest of Block 8, which was the dispensary. Flaucher,
         a criminal  inmate, had been made a kapo and given responsibility for the  dispensary, which contained sick inmates of many
         nationalities. Some of  the ill and infirm were Russians, classed as both prisoners of war and  Russian political prisoners,
         but those in the dispensary also included  Yugoslavs, Belgians, Frenchmen, Poles, Germans, Austrians, Italians and  even Swedes.  Flaucher was, according to Loureau, particularly intolerant of  prisoners
         suffering from diarrhea and unable to control themselves. If  one of them attempted to get up from his bed to go to the bathroom,
         managed only to get out of bed and soiled the floor, Flaucher would  become enraged and beat him severely.  Loureau described having witnessed one beating by Flaucher, from  which
         his victim, an ill Yugoslav, ultimately died. Loureau said that he  didn't know why Flaucher had beaten the Yugoslav, but
         that Flaucher had  announced he was going to give the Yugoslav a beating of fifty lashes  with the whip. According to Loureau,
         the Yugoslav was forced to bend  over a stool, while Loureau(!) pinned the man's hands behind his back  and an orderly held
         the man's head between his legs. Then Flaucher  whipped him. The Yugoslav endured several lashes without uttering a  sound,
         but he soon began to shout and try to get free. During the  ensuing struggle the Yugoslav fell from the stool. When he did
         not obey  Flaucher's order to get up, Flaucher discarded his whip, called the  Yugoslav to him and began to beat him unmercifully,
         slapping him and  striking him with his fists. When the Yugoslav again fell to the floor,  Flaucher kicked him viciously,
         until the Yugoslav stopped shouting, for  he was dead.  Loreau
         also testified that Flaucher was a homosexual who kept two  boys, whom he used "as women," in Block 8. When asked
         if he had ever  witnessed this, the witness responded that he had not, but that he had  seen Flaucher kiss one of them. Virtually
         all other witnesses made  similar statements about Flaucher, testifying that he would seek out  young boys of about fourteen
         and fifteen and attempt to use them  sexually. When the boys refused he would mistreat and frequently beat  them. Augusta
         (Gussie) Lapins (now Augusta Lukomski) returned from her  "take" in this trial and told me that one of the witnesses,
         Herbert  Wisniewski, a young Polish Jew testifying against Flaucher, had  collapsed on the witness stand during direct examination
         by the  prosecution. He had been testifying to the effect that after the Polish  uprising in Warsaw (late in 1944), the Germans
         had arrested a large  number of young boys of about fourteen and fifteen whom they then  brought to Mauthausen. Wisniewski
         said Flaucher had wanted to sleep with  them, and when they would not comply, he had beaten them. The  prosecution asked the
         witness "Did you see these beatings?," to which  there was no response, since Wisniewski had at that moment fainted
         and  fallen to the floor.  Two days later the prosecutor
         announced that he had a communication  from Wisniewski, apologizing for having collapsed on the stand, but  stating that he
         would not return to testify during the trial. The  prosecutor said he had completed his examination of the witness, but the
         defense counsel moved his testimony be stricken from the record, since  he had not had an opportunity to cross-examine the
         witness. Advised that  Wisniewski would supply an affidavit, the defense counsel said that  this would not serve his purposes.
         The court recessed briefly to discuss  the defense's move but returned to deny it, stating that the defense  counsel had refused
         to accept a sworn statement by the witness in lieu  of an opportunity to question him in court. Yet the defense's motion 
         should have been perfectly clear; it could not accept a statement which  contained in it only what the witness or the prosecution
         wished to have  in it, without any opportunity to question the witness about the points  which the defense wished to raise.  The court found Flaucher guilty of the charges and sentenced him to death
         by hanging.  The other witnesses for the prosecution were
         from the groups of  professional witnesses collected at Dachau. They continued to complicate  the proceedings, for their testimony
         appeared to raise more questions  than provide answers. Some of it was obviously fabricated, or so grossly  exaggerated as
         to render it unbelievable. There were repeated instances  of mistaken identity of the same accused and vague, uncertain  statements
         about some of the others. These prosecution witnesses accused  various of the other accused of indiscriminately beating and
         killing  inmates. One witness, Simon Bressler, testified that Hermann Buetgen had  continually beaten the inmates he was guarding
         at the stone quarry.  Bressler provided a description of Buetgen which fit that of Michael  Heller, another guard. The accused
         Buetgen had not worked at the quarry,  but Heller, to whom the witness had not pointed and whom he apparently  did not know,
         had been one of the guards stationed there. Bressler was  asked "Did you ever see the accused, No. 2 [Buetgen], commit
         any  atrocities against or upon any prisoner there at Mauthausen?" Bressler  replied that "He would strike every
         prisoner, each individual prisoner.  He would give him a blow, then another blow all the way down to the  quarry." When
         asked "How many prisoners did you see this accused, No. 2,  beat in this fashion?" Bressler responded "All
         of them. We were eight  hundred men in the detail, and he struck all eight hundred of them." 
         Another prosecution witness, Josef Feldstein, who stated that he had  been at Mauthausen
         from the end of 1942 until May 1945, when the camp  was liberated by the Americans, pointed out accused Hermann Buetgen when
         asked if he knew any of those on trial. He identified him as  "Wittingen," however, also ascribing to him functions
         which had been  performed in Mauthausen by Michael Heller. When asked to spell the name,  Feldstein said he only knew that
         "Wittingen" was the accused's name; he  did not know how to spell it.  Feldstein was asked "Just what makes you so sure that this is the  same man that you saw at Mauthausen?"
         and he responded "l have a good  memory, and what I see I am able to remember after thirty years."  Jacob Sztejnberg, who testified for the prosecution, also definitely  identified
         accused No. 2, Hermann Buetgen, as performing the functions  of a Block leader or guard, which one might expect to have heard
         of  Michael Heller. He said that Buetgen had been guarding the inmates  working in the quarry and that he beat them severely,
         frequently causing  some to die. Sztejnberg testified that Buetgen would beat prisoners who  carried stones smaller than Buetgen
         wished.  In addition to testifying against Buetgen, Sztejnberg
         testified also  against Petrat and Flaucher, whose name he said he did not know properly  and which he mispronounced as "Laucher."
         When questioned about his  testimony against Flaucher, which appeared to be vague, Sztejnberg, an  arrogant witness, grew
         testy and made caustic comments to the  prosecution, which was not calling into question, but merely attempting  to clarify,
         Sztejnberg's statement. The court president was finally  forced to call Sztejnberg before the court and instruct him that
         the  court wanted "no more smart remarks," that he was to respond to the  question raised and that the court would
         determine what was appropriate  and what was not.  During
         the trial, the prosecution was clearly angered by the fact  that some of its witnesses against one accused might speak well
         of  another. Feldstein had accused Buetgen of deeds which could only have  been committed by Michael Heller. But Wilhelm Mornstein
         spoke well of  Michael Heller, as he accused Emil Thielmann of having committed  atrocities, saying that Heller was "the
         opposite of Thielmann." He said  that Heller always expressed horror at what he saw and had said he would  be glad when
         he could get out of there.  Herbert Melching, a witness for
         the prosecution, testified that he  had seen Franz Kofler, the Kommando leader and roll call leader, beat  prisoners to death.
         When asked by the defense counsel how he could be  sure that the prisoners had been beaten to death, he responded: "Because
         the blows were pretty hard." Melching admitted he had never seen any of  the dead bodies, either physically or in photographs,
         of the men he  presumed had died as a result of the beatings.  Kofler
         was also accused of having taken a group of five Jews from  Block 5 into the washroom, whipping them there, then attempting
         to drive  them into the electrically charged wire. When the men refused, Kofler  so harried them that, weakened, they could
         be forced into the wire and  electrocuted. Peter Bleimüller, another prosecution witness, testified  that Kofler would
         come into the Jewish block once a week to beat the  Jewish prisoners. He said that this was during the period of January and
         February of 1942, when no Jew survived more than three days in the  camp. The defense's response to this was contained in
         testimony which  Kofler presented voluntarily to the court. He asked why not one of the  180 inmates from Block 5 had testified
         that he forced Jews from Block 5  into the electrically charged wire. He said that the only one who had  testified to this
         effect had been from Block 4.  One of the witnesses who testified
         against Kofler was a Josef  Schwaiger. He testified that Kofler had beaten prisoners during roll  call. During cross examination
         the defense counsel accused Schwaiger of  having been angered because Kofler had taken away his girlfriend, and  vowing that
         he would get even with him. The girlfriend to whom the  defense counsel referred was a Mrs. von Schwertberg, who lived in
         a  house near Mauthausen, where Schwaiger had frequently worked.  After Herbert Melching had appeared as a witness for the prosecution,  he was subsequently recalled as a witness
         by the defense, over the  prosecution's objections. Melching, who properly identified Buetgen,  testified that as an electrician
         and as operator of the camp movie  projector, Buetgen had no responsibility for guarding prisoners and  could not have beaten
         and killed prisoners.  In the end it was obvious the court
         placed not only more confidence,  but immediate and almost blind belief in the prosecution's witnesses,  despite the confusion
         in their identification of the accused and their  otherwise weak statements. As was usually the case in the Dachau courts,
         there is no indication that the testimony presented by the witnesses  for the defense was even considered.  With virtually no testimony against Stefan Lennert which could even  have
         begun to prove the charges made against him, the court found  Lennert not guilty, the only one of the accused who was acquitted.
         Hermann Buetgen was sentenced to three years imprisonment at hard labor,  and Arno Albert Reuter to two years imprisonment
         at hard labor. Emil  Thielmann was sentenced to life imprisonment. Michael Heller and Franz  Kofler, along with Quirin Flaucher
         and Gustav Petrat, were sentenced to  death by hanging.  I
         saw Danuta Drbuszenska once more, quite by chance, shortly after the termination of the trial. That September there was a
         Volksfest  (carnival) in Dachau, and I went to see what it might be like.  Completely alone, I was wandering around
         the grounds when I suddenly saw  Drbuszenska, who was, like me, wandering by herself through the crowd. I  had thought she
         would not recognize me, but she did, and approached me  as though we were old friends. We spent the afternoon together, hand
         in  hand, enjoying some of what the Volkfest had to offer. There was  no food to be purchased there, but there were
         side shows, a  merry-go-round, and a tunnel of love. We parted late in the afternoon as  friends. 
         Later, I regretted that I never thought to ask her about the trial,  but at that time
         I had no interest in the accused, and my mind was on  her rather than on the case. It surprises me now, but I don't even 
         remember any discussion of what her plans might have been, whether she  would continue to live in Germany or might consider
         returning to Poland.  I never saw her again.  * * * * *  When, a few years ago, the U.S. Army declassified its files on the  war
         crimes trials, I eagerly examined them. The records which most  surprised and disillusioned me were those which dealt with
         the Franz  Kofler trial, in which I had been so enchanted by Danuta Drbuszenska. So  taken by her at the trial, I was startled
         when, in studying the case  file, I found such discrepancies in her testimony that I could only  conclude that she was an
         outrageous liar.  No one asked her, nor did she explain,
         how she could have been  peeling potatoes when Petrat struck her, if she had been "fetched out"  of the roll call,
         as she originally claimed. Nor did the defense  question the differences in her statements about the work these Polish  women
         actually performed. Drbuszenska had testified she was carrying  rails at the camp, rails so heavy it took five women to carry
         one rail,  which would suggest she was not merely peeling potatoes. Yet she could  not have picked up a carrot had she been
         carrying rails, a job function  which later witnesses testified, furthermore, was never assigned to the  women. Drbuszenska,
         obviously, had been stealing food, and her denial of  this accusation did not erase the doubts raised in my mind when I read
         the defense's question and her response.  At the time of
         the trial I was convinced she and Petrat had been  intimate, and the fact that he blushed so intensely when she was  testifying
         tended to confirm this for me. Since I could not imagine an  older man blushing, a trait usually associated with younger people
         afflicted with a conscience, I now checked his identification sheet. I  learned that he was only twenty-two at the time of
         the trial, and he had  been about twenty at the time of the incident. Drbuszenska had been  only nineteen at the time she
         claimed he had struck her and subsequently  killed her friend Wisniewska.  It is impossible to imagine that Petrat took Drbuszenska to "his  apartments only to strike her, and I could
         not believe he took her there  only to twist her pigtails around his arm so that he could raise and  lower her! (Witnesses
         subsequently testified, in fact, that Petrat had  no apartment but was billeted with as many as twenty other enlisted men,
         which sounds far more credible.) Had Drbuszenska claimed that he had  raped her she would have been more believable, for he
         was, after all,  twenty and she nineteen at the time, and also very attractive. It  further struck me as odd that in a regime
         such as that of Hitler a  twenty-year old corporal could have had so much authority he could "kill  and gas people and
         nobody would do anything to him," as I discovered  Drbuszenska had claimed. The other SS personnel at the camps were
         seriously concerned about their responsibilities to their superiors. The  camp commandant of Buchenwald -- hardly a junior-grade
         officer-had been  tried, sentenced and executed because of such abuses of authority, yet  Drbuszenska had blithely attributed
         the power to kill prisoners at will  to Petrat, who was then only twenty! Her statement about Petrat's  authority in the camp
         was obviously untrue.  Her later testimony is also completely
         out of harmony with her  earlier statements that he apparently disliked and wanted to harm her.  If this were so, he could
         never have engaged with her in the gossipy,  teasing form of small talk she indicated they frequently shared.  If there had been a Zilenska, the prosecution appeared never to have  bothered
         to contact her, to have her either submit an affidavit or  testify in person to corroborate Drbuszenska's story. Since there
         was no  one else to confirm or deny the accounting, in the absence of a third  party the court had to choose which account
         they would believe: Petrat's  or Drbuszenska's. Given the atmosphere of the time and place, there was  never any question
         that the court would choose her statement, even if  Petrat had testified.  The court -- and if not the court, certainly the Review Authority --  should have questioned Danuta Drbuszenska's
         statements about the fact  that Petrat was always lurking around the women's washroom, where he  would be at any time of the
         day she appeared there. Other witnesses  testified that he was a "dog leader," testimony which must have had some
         degree of accuracy since it was logical and was repeated by diverse  sources. Yet despite claiming she frequently encountered
         Petrat in camp,  Danuta Drbuszenska did not once mention his dog. One wonders, if he was  the dog leader, where he kept his
         dog when he was, as she alleges,  stalking her in the camp. Drbuszenska stated Petrat was always there  when she went to the
         washroom. This too is impossible to believe. What  SS camp guard would be allowed to loiter in a woman's washroom?  Drbuszenska's testimony is clearly that of a woman who had been used  and
         then rejected. Such instances are not rare (in the Army I frequently  heard the cautionary expression that one "should
         not play around too  close to the flagpole"). The defense counsel attempted to make this  point in court, but in a court
         so biased against the accused he could  not have hoped for success.  With regard to the other accused, I noted, with regret, that the  court had obviously chosen not to follow the lead
         provided by the  defense counsel, who had attempted to prove complicity among the  witnesses against the accused. The fact
         that three witnesses, and  possibly four, had so firmly identified Hermann Buetgen, but then  attributed to him another function
         in the camp, one which applied only  to Michael Heller, could hardly have been coincidental The testimony of a  fourth witness,
         Wincenty Lipinski, in which he identified Hermann  Buetgen as another of the accused, was stricken from the record. There
         exists nothing now to show either why it was stricken or with whom he  had confused Buetgen. We shall, therefore, never know
         what Lipinski said  or with whom he confused Hermann Buetgen, but it is quite likely that  it was also Heller.  The prosecution had made one direct reference to the special findings  during
         the proceedings, when toward the end of the trial the defense  counsel had moved that Lennert, one of the accused, be acquitted
         since  there was no evidence linking him to any crimes. The prosecution  objected to this motion, indicating that one of the
         pretrial statements  by Lennert had established he had been a member of the staff at  Mauthausen and was, therefore, guilty
         under the common cause finding of  the court in the Altfuldisch case.  These special findings were introduced in every subsidiary  concentration camp trial and were accepted literally
         by the courts. It  always seemed to me outrageous for anyone to assign guilt to an  individual on the basis of where he worked,
         without taking into  consideration that the individual might have been ordered to work there.  Such a finding ignores the
         fact that an individual might have been  strongly opposed, philosophically and morally, to the principles  according to which
         he was forced to perform.  The review counsel for this particular
         case, Louie T. Tischer,  obviously considered the special findings his authority for upholding  the courts finding of guilty
         in each of the cases, except that of Stefan  Lennert. He began and ended his review by citing the special findings.  Although
         Tischer made mention of the witnesses, both those who testified  in person and those who had provided extrajudicial statements,
         he  clearly relied on the special findings to uphold every conviction.  At one point in the trial, the defense counsel had objected to a  witness whom the prosecution had called. The defense
         counsel noted that  this particular witness had been sitting in the courtroom two days  earlier, listening to testimony presented
         by prosecution witness Fosel  Schoeps against five of the accused. The court considered the objection  and sustained it, denying
         use of the witness to prosecution. Evidently  the court did not consider the fact that Schoeps might have been  advising all
         the other witnesses on what was transpiring in the  proceedings.  Regarding Hermann Buetgen, Tischer noted that several witnesses had  confused Buetgen with Lennert, but he brushed
         aside their confusion and  went on to rule that the incidents subsequently described by the  witnesses were committed by Buetgen.
         This, I felt, was hardly  conscionable, for the witnesses statements, as they appear in the  record, clearly indicated they
         were lying. These false statements should  at least have raised a question in the review counsel's mind. The  evidence presented
         indicated very strongly that Buetgen was not and  could not have been at the stone quarry. One also wonders how Heller  could
         have been found guilty of the crimes the witnesses attributed to  him there when these witnesses could not even identify him!  On the basis of testimony by several witnesses -- Lipinski, Schmeling  and
         Milonia, a former Yugoslav inmate -- Michael Heller was sentenced  to death by hanging. Peda and Lipinski had been questioned
         by the  defense as to whether they had not discussed the case outside the court,  only to have the two witnesses respond with
         conflicting statements.  Many of the prosecution's witnesses testified in Heller's favor. It  appeared, however, that all
         the positive testimony with regard to this  accused -- even that presented by the prosecution's witnesses --  appeared to
         have been ignored. One such witness, Barzinsky, testified he  had made a new uniform for Heller to wear on his furlough, which
         would  have placed him outside the camp at the time he was alleged by some of  the witnesses to have shot and killed inmates.
         But this testimony, too,  played no role in the court's decision.  As I had expected, Gustav Petrat had been done irreparable harm by  the testimony of Danuta Drbuszenska. Not only
         had the court never  questioned her, neither did the review authority, Mr. Tischer. He quoted  her testimony entirely, although
         he did mention that "she appeared to  be slightly confused over one of the details," which he treated and  overlooked
         as though it were a minor incident.  Other than for his blushing
         in court, I had not again thought of  Gustav Petrat nor ever considered him as a human being, even during the  trial, but
         I was suddenly overwhelmed by a feeling of compassion for him  when I read the file in the archives. He was a man who was
         sentenced to  death and subsequently hanged on the basis of testimony which was, by  even the admission of the review counsel,
         flawed, and by other testimony  which failed to identify him conclusively.  According to Petrat's statement, he had been transferred to  Mauthausen because of wounds he had received in the
         war. Certainly this  could have been verified. Even if the court and the review counsel had  been convinced it had indeed
         been Petrat who had been following the  march to Gunskirchen, they might also have asked themselves if he, as a  low-ranking
         SS soldier in a dictatorship, had not merely been obeying  orders.  In my review of the file, I sadly noted a pathetic sworn statement  submitted by Gustav Petrat, which appeared to
         me to be, so many years  after he had been hanged in consequence of his duty at Mauthausen, the  echo of a lonely young ghost.
         The statement was prepared in German but  was translated for the recipient, since it was submitted to the Military  Governor
         of the U.S. Zone of Occupation. The statement, in translation,  reads as follows:  I, Gustav PETRAT, born 12 November 1924 in  Wirballen/Litauen [Lithuania], presently in LandsberglLech, make the
         following sworn statement after I have been informed that this statement  is to be submitted to the Military Governor of the
         U.S. Zone and that  any false statement may be severely punished.  1. In May 1944, on account
         of my wound, I was transferred to the  guard personnel of the Mauthausen concentration camp and served there as  dog leader
         with the 16th Guard Company. My rank was Corporal  (Rottenführer) in the Armed (Waffen) SS.  2.
         On 10 May 1945, I was taken prisoner by American soldiers in Ried  near Mauthausen and taken to the Tittling camp. When I
         got there I was  mistreated with whips, fists and feet, as was the general custom at that  time for newly arrived prisoners. 
         3. Like many others I was quartered in a potato patch in the open air, so that we all were exposed to the
         weather.  4. On 26 May 1945 I had my first interrogation there, which was one  of the most memorable
         of my entire captivity. Even before they asked me  the first question, they struck me so that I collapsed. After I had  managed
         to stagger upright again in spite of my weak condition and aided  by the necessary kicks from the interrogator, the real interrogation
         began. They asked me questions that I could not have answered if I had  had the best will in the world to do so. I was to
         state where the leader  of the Mauthausen concentration camp was. It was impossible for me to  give the information, since
         I really didn't know, and as a little  corporal I couldn't know. My reply loosed a hail of blows.  The
         second question concerned myself. They asked me how many  prisoners I had shot and beaten, to which I replied truthfully and
         with a  clean conscience, "Not one."  The interrogator drew a pistol and threatened
         to kill me if I did not  tell the truth immediately. He meant, however, that I should be hanged.  I told him again that I
         only spoke the truth and he could kill me if he  wanted to, that at least I would be freed from the whole mess. Then  more
         blows, and with a push in the small of the back I fled [Sic. This  may be a typographical error, since the German text in
         the original  statement is bin geflogen, which means literally "flew," but should be translated "was
         sent out flying" or "was thrown out."]  5. On 9 May [sic] 1945 I was taken to the
         Moosburg internment camp  with about 80 other prisoners. On 7 September 1945 I had my second  interrogation, in Moosburg,
         at which they asked me the same questions  they asked in the Tittling camp. There too, I received blows from a  whip. This
         consisted of a wooden handle about 30 cm. long to which  leather straps had been fastened. Since I had to answer the questions
         in  the negative, they told me that there were other ways and means to  force me to tell the truth. Then the interrogator
         left the room for a  few minutes, and returned with a second interrogator. Since I had to  reply to this man's questions in
         the negative also because I did not  know of any killing, he struck me with his fists and threatened to  "hang"
         and "shoot" me. After I stuck to my guns, I was taken back to my  quarters.  On 10 February
         1946 I was transferred to the Dachau internment camp.  6. There I was interrogated two times.
         At the interrogation on 21  June 1946 they read statements to me that said that I had shot eight  prisoners in the Mauthausen
         concentration camp. I was to sign this, but I  vigorously refused because I never shot a prisoner. After repeated  requests
         to sign, I was struck with fists and kicked with feet. They put  a paper in front of me to sign in which it said that I had
         never been  beaten by American interrogators and soldiers. I refused, and only after  repeated blows with the threat that
         I would never leave the room alive  until I had signed, and that they would know how to break down my  obstinacy, did I put
         my name to it.  I had never had anything to do with the court in my life and I was afraid that
         they would make my life even more difficult  7. In January 1947 the so-called "line-ups"
         commenced in the Dachau  Special Camp. I was confronted with prisoners three times, yet, no one  accused me of the least thing.
         The man in charge of the line-up, Mr.  ENTRESS, told the prisoners that I was said to have shot many prisoners  and beaten
         them to death, whereat only a burst of laughter arose. At  that time I was 22 years old. When I was 19 I came to Mauthausen
         as dog-  leader.  A former prominent prisoner, Dr. SANNER, asserted he did not know me,  but if
         a dog leader had beaten prisoners to death or shot them that  would certainly have become known in the camp. Many other former
         long-term prisoners joined in this exonerating testimony.  8. At mid-July 1947 I and my seven
         co-accused were presented for the  first time to our official defense lawyer, Major William A. OATES. To  his question whether
         I knew what I was accused of, and by whom, I could  only reply that I was not conscious of any guilt and also had never  counted
         on being brought to trial, since I had never mistreated or  killed anyone.  Major OATES told me
         that he too, knew nothing, that he could not get a  glimpse of the incriminating papers of the prosecution, and therefore
         he would have to go by my statements, the general charge sheet, and the  testimony of the prosecution witnesses at the triaL 
         Since only the prosecution had access to the records, my lawyer did  not see them, and so naturally it was
         very difficult for him to prepare a  defense. Major OATES promised to do everything he could. Also I gave  him the names of
         the witnesses who were important for me, and who  themselves were interned in Dachau.  9. On 15
         July 1947 I received a general charge sheet and was transferred with my co-accused to the Bunker I, Camp Dachau. 
         It was impossible for me to procure any exonerating material there.  One was cut off from the outside world.
         Letters to relatives or  acquaintances in which something was said about witnesses or the  approaching trial were so cut up
         that the receiver received only scraps  from which he could glean nothing. For that reason it was made  impossible for me
         to procure any defense material. Requests for special  letters to witnesses or prior reports to the defense lawyer were  fruitless. 
         Already in little things they were making the procuring of  exonerating material impossible. Also the time
         before the beginning of  the trial was far too short to obtain any material  10. On 6 August 1947
         the trial began, and lasted until 21 August.  11. The prosecution witnesses had every support
         of the prosecuting  authorities. When they were shown to be lying, up jumped the prosecutor,  Mr. Lundberg, and accused the
         defense lawyer of intimidating the  witnesses and trying to make out that they were liars.  12.
         In reality, the opposite was the truth. Defense witnesses were  intimidated by the braying of the prosecutor or were branded
         as false.  It happened that defense witnesses were threatened and beaten by foreign  former prisoners so that the former had
         no more interest in appearing  for the defense. They were afraid that they too would be accused of  something, which the foreign
         prisoners were quite capable of, as they  hated everything German and were out for revenge.  13.
         In the courtroom were Polish, Jugoslav and Jewish prisoners as  spectators who served as an information bureau, that is, during
         the  court recesses they told their comrades, who were still waiting for  their interrogation, everything that had been discussed
         during the  course of the trial. On the basis of this information the latter were  then able to reinforce the accusations
         and bring to naught the  exoneration, which was scanty enough anyway.  For this reason it was
         also possible to always bring out the same points in the accusations.  14. The questionnaires
         we had filled out were handed to the  prosecution witnesses by the prosecutor or by his interpreter. In this  way each exact
         date could be looked up in order to incriminate the  accused without having to fear that a false statement was being made.
         In  spite of this, it happened that they contradicted themselves in  cross-examination. However, because the witnesses were
         under the  protection of the American court, they had nothing to fear from perjury,  which they committed repeatedly. 
         15. We, as accused, had no right to give our opinion. At the  beginning of the trial the defense lawyer
         told us that we had to keep  quite still and the questions we wanted to have put to the witnesses we  were to write on a slip
         of paper and give to his interpreter, Mr. BARR. I  did not understand most of the trial, since I am a Lithuanian and only
          know a little German. I had to find out during the court recesses, from  my comrades, of what I was accused.  17. [Sic. The paragraph is misnumbered in the original document.]  There was no final argument by the defense lawyer.
         I was sentenced to  death on 21 August 1947. The sentence was approved on 26 June 1948.  Landsberg/Lech,
         10 September 1948 /s/ Gustav PETRAT.  
   It
         is now late to be considering the question of Petrat's personal  innocence or guilt, since he was executed in 1948. Apart
         from some  possible exaggerations, Petrat's statement must be considered credible.  His comments with regard to the witnesses
         conferring with one another  has the ring of truth and confirms what the defense counsel had already  suspected and had indicated
         to the court during his interrogation of the  witnesses: that there was discussion among the witnesses about the  testimony.
         The witnesses' mistaken identification of the accused Buetgen  firmly and clearly indicates collusion among the Prosecution's
          witnesses.  There can also be no question about the use
         of duress and physical  force by the interrogators. This was confirmed by the review of the  Malmedy case, but was present
         in other American cases as well. There  were certainly American legal personnel who were disturbed by the  beatings administered
         to the prisoners in order to extract confessions  of guilt, but for the most part they kept silent. One investigator who 
         did know and was deeply distressed was, surprisingly enough, Fred  Fleischmann, an American Jew who had been forced to flee
         Germany during  World War II. Fleischmann later complained bitterly about the beatings  the German prisoners were forced to
         endure.  * * * * *  I was the reporter assigned to record the last session of the  Nordhausen trial, which was also the last trial session
         held in Dachau.  Following that I left Dachau for another post in Germany before  returning to the United States, one month
         before my twenty-first  birthday. I subsequently married, fathered three children, and spent the  intervening years attempting
         to provide for my family.  My thoughts often return to the
         Dachau war crimes trials. My memories  of my duties there have remained strong, and, like many Americans, I  continue to hear
         much about German misdeeds during the war.  There is a time
         after which all things should end. The time is long  past for one-sided recriminations over German war crimes and  concentration
         camps. As anyone who worked in Dachau, impartially, could  testify, there were also injustices committed in the trials instituted
          to punish the Germans. The Americans gave the defendants less than due  process. Jewish and Polish investigators and witnesses
         took vengeance on  many of the accused, some of whom had done nothing to them, many of  whom they did not even know.  There were many innocents in Dachau. Most of them were not permitted  free
         departure from the camp, and many lost their lives to the  executioners at Landsberg, never again to return to their homes
         and  families.  
      
       _______________________________________________________    The Malmedy Trial:  Denial of the Obvious 
                                                              
           
        
                          The Malmedy trial took place from May 16 to July 16, 1946 at  Dachau
         before a military  tribunal of American officers operating under  rules established
         by the Nuremberg International  Military Tribunal.[1] American historian Steven P. Remy has written a book titled  The Malmedy Massacre
         which disputes that the 73 German defendants in this trial  were improperly convicted.     Remy states in his book’s conclusion
         that American interrogators did  not use physical  or psychological pressure to
         obtain information at any  of their postwar trials. Remy writes:[2]      “There
         is no evidence that in the North African, European, or Pacific  theaters American  interrogators
         relied on systematic forms of physical  and psychological pressure to  obtain information from
         combatants or  civilians. Nor is there convincing  evidence that they did so in war  crimes investigations
         after the war.”        This
         article will document some of the physical and psychological   pressure used in
         the Malmedy and other American-run postwar trials.     Improper
         Postwar Interrogations     Scene from the Malmedy Show Trial     
            Contrary to Remy’s statement, physical and psychological pressure was  frequently
         used  by interrogators in American-run postwar trials.  Benjamin Ferencz, a Jewish
         American  war crimes investigator who received  a Harvard law degree in 1943, was
         assigned to  investigate the  concentration camps at Buchenwald, Mauthausen and
         Dachau.[3]  Ferencz  admits that he used threats to obtain confessions. Ferencz  relates
         a story concerning  his interrogation of an SS colonel in which  he took out his
         pistol in order to intimidate him:[4]      “What
         do you do when he thinks he’s still in charge? I’ve got to show  him that I’m 
         in charge. All I’ve got to do is squeeze the trigger and  mark it as auf der Flucht erschossen 
         (shot while trying to escape)… I  said ‘you are in a filthy uniform sir, take it off!’ I stripped  him  naked and threw his clothes out the window. He stood there naked for  half an  hour,
         covering his balls with his hands, not looking nearly like  the SS officer he was  reported to
         be. Then I said ‘now listen, you and I  are gonna have an understanding  right now. I am
         a Jew—I would love to  kill you and mark you down as auf der Flucht  erschossen, but I’m
         gonna  do what you would never do. You are gonna sit down and  write out exactly  what happened—when
         you entered the camp, who was there, how many  died,  why they died, everything else about it.
         Or, you don’t have to do  that—you are  under no obligation—you can write a
         note of five lines to  your wife, and I will try to deliver it…’  (Ferencz gets the
         desired  statement and continues:) I then went to someone outside  and said  ‘Major, I got
         this affidavit, but I’m not gonna use it—it is a coerced  confession.  I want you
         to go in, be nice to him, and have him re-write  it.’ The second one seemed  to be okay—I
         told him to keep the second one  and destroy the first one. That was it.”        The fact that Ferencz threatened and humiliated his witness and  reported
         as much to  his superior officer indicates that he operated in a  culture where
         such illegal methods  were acceptable.[5] Any Harvard law graduate knows that such evidence is not  admissible in a legitimate
         court of law.     The defense counsel
         at the Mauthausen trial in Dachau insisted that  signed confessions  of the accused,
         used by the prosecution to great  effect, had been extracted from the  defendants
         through physical abuse,  coercion, and deceit.[6] Ferencz  admits that these defense counsel’s claims were correct:[7]      “You
         know how I got witness statements? I’d go into a village where,  say, an American  pilot
         had parachuted and been beaten to death and line  everyone up against the wall.  Then I’d
         say, ‘Anyone who lies will be  shot on the spot.’ It never  occurred to me that statements
         taken under  duress would be invalid.”        Robert Kempner was the American chief prosecutor in the Ministries  Trial in which 21  German government officials were defendants. Kempner  was a German Jew who had  lost his job as Chief Legal Advisor of the  Prussian police department because of National  Socialist race laws. He  was forced to emigrate first to Italy and then to the United States.   Kempner was bitter about the experience and was eager to prosecute and  convict  German officials in government service.[8]     Kempner bribed German Under
         Secretary Friedrich Wilhelm Gaus to  testify for the  prosecution in the Ministries
         Trial. The transcript of  Kempner’s interrogation of Gaus  reveals that Kempner
         persuaded Gaus to  exchange the role of defendant for that of  collaborator with
         the  prosecution. Gaus was released from isolation, and a few days  later a  German
         newspaper reported a long handwritten declaration from Gaus in  which  he confessed
         the collective guilt of the German government  service. Kempner had given  Gaus’s
         confession to the newspaper.[9] Kempner had also threatened to turn Gaus  over to the Soviets unless Gaus was
         willing to cooperate with the prosecution.[10]     Attorney Charles LaFollete
         said that Kempner’s “foolish,  unlawyer-like method of interrogation  was
         common knowledge in Nuremberg  all the time I was there and protested by those of 
         us who anticipated  the arising of a day, just such as we now have, when the Germans would   attempt to make martyrs out of the common criminals on trial in  Nuremberg.”[11]     Kempner also attempted to
         bribe German State Secretary Ernst von  Weizsäcker during  the Ministries
         Trial. However, von Weizsäcker  courageously refused to cooperate.  Richard
         von Weizsäcker, who helped  defend his father at the trial, wrote: “During the  proceedings Kempner  once said to me that though our defense was very good, it suffered  from  one error: We should have turned him, Kempner, into my father’s defense  attorney.”  Richard von Weizsäcker felt Kempner’s words were nothing more  than pure cynicism.[12]       Torture
         of Defendants    Allied prosecutors often used
         torture to help convict the defendants  at Nuremberg and  other postwar trials.
         A leading example of the use of  torture to obtain evidence is the  confession
         of Rudolf Höss, the former  commandant at Auschwitz. Höss’s testimony at  the Nuremberg trial was the  most important evidence presented of a German extermination  program.  Höss said that more than 2.5 million people were exterminated in the  Auschwitz  gas chambers, and that another 500,000 inmates had died there  of other causes.[13]   No defender of the Holocaust story today accepts these inflated  figures, and
         other key  portions of Höss’s testimony at Nuremberg are  widely acknowledged
         to be untrue.     In 1983 the anti-Nazi
         book Legions of Death by  Rupert Butler stated that Jewish Sgt.  Bernard Clarke and other British  officers tortured Rudolf Höss into making his confession.  The torture of  Höss was exceptionally brutal. Neither Bernard Clarke nor Rupert Butler   finds anything wrong or immoral in Höss’s torture. Neither of them  seems to understand  the importance of their revelations. Bernard Clarke  and Rupert Butler prove that Höss’s
          testimony at Nuremberg was obtained  by torture, and is therefore not credible
          evidence in establishing a  program of German genocide against European Jewry.[14]     Bernard Clarke was not the
         only Jew who tortured Germans to obtain  confessions.  Tuviah Friedman, for example,
         was a Polish Jew who survived  the German concentration  camps. Friedman by his
         own admission beat up  to 20 German prisoners a day to obtain  confessions and
         weed out SS  officers. Friedman stated that  “It gave me satisfaction. I
         wanted to see  if they would cry or beg for mercy.”[15]     Joseph Kirschbaum was also
         accused of physical abuse at the Malmedy  trial when German  prisoner Otto Eichler
         accused Kirschbaum of beating  him. A review of the medical records  indicated
         that Eichler had received  an injury, but it could not be proven that Kirschbaum had 
         caused the  injury.[16]       False
         and Perjured Witness Testimony    False witnesses
         were used at most of the Allied war-crime trials.  Stephen F. Pinter served  as
         a U.S. Army prosecuting attorney at the  American trials of Germans at Dachau. In a 
         1960 affidavit Pinter said  that “notoriously perjured witnesses” were used to charge  Germans with  false and unfounded crimes. Pinter stated, “Unfortunately, as a result   of these miscarriages of justice, many innocent persons were convicted  and some were executed.”[17]     Joseph Halow, a young U.S.
         court reporter at the Dachau trials in  1947,  later described some of the false
         witnesses at the Dachau trials:[18]      “…the
         major portion of the witnesses for the prosecution in the  concentration-camp  cases were what
         came to be known as ‘professional  witnesses,’ and everyone working  at Dachau regarded
         them as such.  ‘Professional,’ since they were paid for each day  they testified.
         In  addition, they were provided free housing and food, at a time when  these  were often difficult
         to come by in Germany. Some of them stayed in  Dachau  for months, testifying in every one of
         the concentration-camp  cases. In other words,  these witnesses made their living testifying for
          the prosecution. Usually, they were  former inmates from the camps, and  their strong hatred
         of the Germans  should, at the very least, have  called their testimony into question...”   
             As is easily demonstrated by studying the Franz
         Kofler trial, these  witnesses had often  never laid eyes on the men against whom
         they were  testifying! That they lied in court is  clear from a close reading of
         the  proceedings of the trials, for their  testimony is frequently full of  contradictions
         and inconsistencies.[19]     An embarrassing example of
         perjured witness testimony occurred at the  Dachau trials. U.S. investigator Joseph
         Kirschbaum brought a former  concentration- camp inmate named  Einstein into the
         court to testify that  the defendant, Menzel, had murdered Einstein’s brother.  Menzel,
          however, foiled this testimony—he had only to point to Einstein’s  brother sitting in  the court room listening to the story of his own  murder. Kirschbaum thereupon turned to  Einstein and exclaimed, “How can  we bring this pig to the gallows,  if
         you are so stupid as to bring your  brother into the court?”[20]     The use of false witnesses
         has been acknowledged by Johann  Neuhäusler, who was an  ecclesiastical resistance
         fighter interned in two  German concentration camps from 1941 to  1945. Neuhäusler
         wrote that in  some of the American-run trials “many of the witnesses,  perhaps
         90%,  were paid professional witnesses with criminal records ranging from   robbery
         to homosexuality.”[21]       Willis
         N. Everett, Jr.    American attorney Willis
         N. Everett, Jr. was the lead defense counsel  at the Malmedy trial.  Everett was
         convinced that the Malmedy trial had  been an ethical abomination.  Approximately
         100 of Everett’s friends and  some additional American military officers  advised
         Everett to forget  about the Malmedy case and live in the present. Everett’s 
         sense of  ethics, however, set him on a mission to obtain justice for the Malmedy  defendants.[22]     Everett and another defense-team
         member prepared a 228-page critique  of the investigation  and trial, stating that
         the Malmedy convictions had  been secured primarily on the basis of  “illegal
         and fraudulently  procured confessions.” The petition also argued that the trial was  a  travesty of justice to German soldiers since the Allies were also guilty  of the same violations  of international law. Everett sent this document  to Lt. Col. Clio Straight’s office for
         inclusion  in the internal review  process that was mandatory before verdicts and
         sentences became final.[23]     Everett began a multipronged
         campaign of judicial appeal, publicity  and congressional   pressure to get
         a retrial of the Malmedy case.  Everett filed an unsuccessful petition with  the
         U.S. Supreme Court to  rehear the Malmedy case. Everett then prepared an appeal 
         to the  International Court of Justice in The Hague (ICJ). Everett knew there  was little  chance the ICJ would accept his case since only states could  be parties to cases before  the ICJ. The ICJ predictably refused to hear  Everett’s appeal of the Malmedy case.[24]     Everett made a huge personal
         and financial sacrifice to free the  Malmedy defendants.  The physical and emotional
         stress from the appeal  process caused Everett to suffer  from declining health
         and at least one  heart attack. Everett estimated his out-of-pocket  expenses to
         be as much  as $50,000, to which must be added the income lost through  his neglect
          of his law practice. The West German consul in Atlanta later presented  Everett  with
         a check for $5,000 as a gesture of appreciation for his  inexhaustible efforts  on
         behalf of the Malmedy defendants.[25]     Why did Everett make such
         a huge personal and financial sacrifice? Remy writes:[26]      “Everett
         also believed the army had treated him shabbily. He had been  given an assignment  for which he
         did not have the requisite experience  or enough time, in his view, to prepare  the case. Though
         he and the  other defense lawyers had nonetheless mounted a vigorous  defense, they  lost the
         case, and badly. Facing the prospect of returning to his  struggling  Atlanta law firm and professional
         obscurity, he viewed a  challenge to the outcome of  the Malmedy trial as an opportunity for 
         personal and professional redemption. Not least,  there was the  possibility of considerable financial
         gain, as he believed he had a  story  worth a great deal of money to the press.”   
             Remy provides no documentation for his contention
         that Everett  challenged the outcome  of the Malmedy trial “as an opportunity
         for  personal and professional redemption” and  “the possibility of
          considerable financial gain.” Everett had more to gain financially and  
         professionally by forgetting the Malmedy trial and working full time in  his law firm. 
         Remy by his unsubstantiated statements is attempting to  discredit Everett’s motives  for challenging the Malmedy verdict.     Conclusion    Steven Remy writes:[27]    “The creation and perpetuation
         of self-serving myths about the past  remains one of the  most powerful cultural and political
         forces in the  modern world. Gone unchallenged,  such myths harden hearts and impede  dialog and
         reconciliation between individuals, communities, and entire  nations. They block the flow of honest
         and open-ended argument  about the  past and its significance to the present. Understanding the
          relationship  between conflict and memory—individual and collective—will  always
         be  difficult and inconclusive. The point is to keep having the  arguments.”   
             Remy is correct that we should keep having the
         arguments. These  arguments should  include the following from American attorney
         Warren  Magee, who served as defense counsel  in the Ministries Trial:[28]      “‘An
         eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth’ is the driving force  behind the prosecutions  at
         Nuremberg. While it grieves me to say this,  the prosecution staff, its lawyers, research  analysts,
         interpreters,  clerks, etc. is largely Jewish. Many are Germans who fled their  country  and only
         recently took out American citizenship. Jewish influence was  even apparent  at the first trial,
         labeled the IMT. Atrocities against  Jews are always stressed above all else…  With persecuted
         Jews in the  background directing the proceedings, the trials cannot be  maintained in  an objectivity
         aloof from vindictiveness, personal grievances, and  racial  desires for revenge… Basic
         principles have been disregarded by  ‘new’ Americans,  many of whom have imbedded
         in their very beings  European racial hatreds and prejudices.”      
          The arguments should also include the following from Benjamin Ferencz:[29]     “I was there for the
         liberation, as a sergeant in the Third Army,  General Patton’s Army,  and
         my task was to collect camp records and  witness testimony, which became the basis 
         for prosecutions…But the  Dachau trials were utterly contemptible. There was nothing  resembling  the rule of law. More like court-martials. For example, they might bring  in 20  or 30 people, line them up, each one with a number on a card tied  around his neck. The  court would consist of three officers. None of  them had any legal education as far as I  could make out; it was  coincidental if they did. One officer was assigned as defense counsel,   another as prosecutor, the senior one presiding. The prosecutor would  get up and say  something like this: We accuse all of you of being  accomplices to crimes against humanity  and war crimes and mistreatment  of prisoners of war and other brutalities in the camp,  between 1942 and  1943, what do you have to say for yourself? Each defendant would  be  given about a minute to state his case, which was usually, not guilty.  One trial for instance,  which lasted two minutes, convicted 10 people  and sentenced them all to death. It was  not my idea of a judicial  process. I mean, I was a young, idealistic Harvard law graduate.”     Ferencz states that nobody including himself
         protested  against such procedures in these Dachau trials.[30]     The Malmedy trial was probably
         closer to a fair judicial process than  Ferencz’s aforementioned  description.
         However, the Malmedy trial was  not a fair and impartial hearing. The lack  of
         documentary evidence, the  use of mock trials and interrogation methods designed to 
         produce false  confessions, military judges with little or no legal training, and  unreliable  eyewitness testimony assured the conviction of all 73 German  defendants in the Malmedy trial.[31]       Notes   	 		 			| [1] |  			Parker, Danny S., Hitler’s Warrior: The Life and Wars of SS Colonel Jochen Peiper,
         Boston, Mass.: Da Capo Press, 2014, p. 148. |  		  		 			| [2] |  			Remy, Steven P., The Malmedy Massacre: The War Crimes Trial Controversy, Cambridge,
         Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2017, p. 279. |  		  		 			| [3] |  			Stover, Eric, Peskin, Victor, and Koenig, Alexa, Hiding in Plain Sight: The Pursuit
         of War Criminals from Nuremberg to the War on Terror, Oakland, Cal.: University of California Press, 2016, p. 32. | 
         		  		 			| [4] |  			Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
         2012, pp. 82-83. |  		  		 			| [5] |  			Ibid., p. 83. |  		  		 			| [6] |  			Jardim, Tomaz, The Mauthausen Trial, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
         2012, p. 6. |  		  		 			| [7] |  			Brzezinski, Matthew, “Giving Hitler Hell”, The Washington Post Magazine,
         July 24, 2005, p. 26. |  		  		 			| [8] |  			Weizsäcker, Richard von, From Weimar to the Wall: My Life in German Politics,
         New York: Broadway Books, 1997, pp. 92, 97. |  		  		 			| [9] |  			Ibid., pp. 97-98. |  		  		 			| [10] |  			Maguire, Peter, Law and War: International Law & American History, New York:
         Columbia University Press, 2010, p. 117. |  		  		 			| [11] |  			Frei, Norbert, Adenauer’s Germany and the Past: The Politics of Amnesty and Integration,
         New York: Columbia University Press, 2002, p. 108. |  		  		 			| [12] |  			Weizsäcker, Richard von, From Weimar to the Wall: My Life in German Politics,
         New York: Broadway Books, 1997, pp. 98-99. |  		  		 			| [13] |  			Taylor, Telford, The Anatomy of the Nuremberg Trials: A Personal Memoir, New York:
         Alfred A. Knopf, 1992, p. 363. |  		  		 			| [14] |  			Faurisson, Robert, “How the British Obtained the Confessions of Rudolf Höss,”
         The Journal of Historical Review, Vol. 7, No. 4, Winter 1986-87, pp. 392-399. |  		  		 			| [15] |  			Stover, Eric, Peskin, Victor, and Koenig, Alexa, Hiding in Plain Sight: The Pursuit
         of War Criminals from Nuremberg to the War on Terror, Oakland, Cal.: University of California Press, 2016, pp. 70-71. | 
         		  		 			| [16] |  			Remy, Steven P., The Malmedy Massacre: The War Crimes Trial Controversy, Cambridge,
         Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2017, p. 141. |  		  		 			| [17] |  			Sworn and notarized statement by Stephen F. Pinter, Feb. 9, 1960.  Facsimile in Erich Kern,
         ed., Verheimlichte Dokumente, Munich: 1988, p.  429. |  		  		 			| [18] |  			Halow, Joseph, Innocent at Dachau, Newport Beach, Cal.: Institute for Historical
         Review, 1992, p. 61. |  		  		 			| [19] |  			Ibid., p. 312. |  		  		 			| [20] |  			Ibid, pp. 312-313; see also Utley, Freda, The High Cost of Vengeance,
         Chicago: Henry Regnery Company, 1949, p. 195. |  		  		 			| [21] |  			Frei, Norbert, Adenauer’s Germany and the Past: The Politics of Amnesty and Integration,
         New York: Columbia University Press, 2002, pp. 110-111. |  		  		 			| [22] |  			Weingartner, James J., A Peculiar Crusade: Willis M. Everett and the Malmedy Massacre,
         New York: New York University Press, 2000, pp. 119, 138. |  		  		 			| [23] |  			Ibid., pp. 120-122. |  		  		 			| [24] |  			Ibid., pp. 150, 175, 181-183. |  		  		 			| [25] |  			Ibid., pp. 199, 220. |  		  		 			| [26] |  			Remy, Steven P., The Malmedy Massacre: The War Crimes Trial Controversy, Cambridge,
         Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2017, pp. 130-131. |  		  		 			| [27] |  			Ibid., p. 280. |  		  		 			| [28] |  			Ibid., p. 134. |  		  		 			| [29] |  			Stuart, Heikelina Verrijn and Simons, Marlise, The Prosecutor and the Judge, Amsterdam:
         Amsterdam University Press, 2009, p. 17. |  		  		 			| [30] |  			Ibid. |  		  		 			| [31] |  			Remy, Steven P., The Malmedy Massacre: The War Crimes Trial Controversy, Cambridge,
         Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2017, pp. 58, 125. |     
      
    
   
                 
   
   
   
                 
   
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