August, 1944
Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau submits his plan for post-war
treatment
of Nazi leaders to President Roosevelt. He proposes shooting many
leaders upon capture, using German POWs to rebuild Europe, and tearing
down industry and remaking Germany as an agricultural society.
September 15, 1944
Colonel Murray Bernays, of the War Department's Special Project Branch,
proposes part of the framework that will be used in Nuremburg.
Bernays
proposes treating the Nazi regime as a criminal plot. William Chanler,
a friend of Secretary of War Stinson, suggests another part of the
framework:
making the waging of a war of aggression a crime.
February, 1945
Meeting at Yalta, FDR, Churchill and Stalin agree that a prosecution
of Axis leaders should follow the expected conclusion of World War II.
April, 1945
President Trumant asks Samuel Rosenman to approach Supreme Court
Justice
Robert Jackson and inquire about his willingness to serve as chief U.
S.
prosecutor in a war crimes trial.
April 30, 1945
Adolph Hitler commits suicide in his bunker below the Berlin sewer
system.
May 2, 1945
President Truman appoints Robert Jackson as chief U. S. counsel for
the prosecution of Nazi war criminals.
May 6, 1945
Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering surrenders to the Allies. Goering
is at first toasted with champagne, but later is transferred to Bad
Mondorf
in Luxembourg.
May 7, 1945
Colonel General Alfred Jodl signs the terms of unconditional surrender
for Germany in Rheims World War II in Europe ends.
May 23, 1945
British tanks enter Flensburg, Germany. In Flensburg, the British
take several of the Nazis that will be tried in the Major War Figures
Trial,
including Donitz, Jodl, Keitel, Rosenberg, and Speer. Heinrich
Himmler,
the most powerful and terrifying of the Nazi leaders after Hitler,
commits
suicide.
June 26, 1945
Robert Jackson departs Washington to meet with his Allied counterparts
in London to discuss legal proceedings against Nazi officials.
Numerous
disagreements are discussed, including whether to use the adversarial
system
favored by the americans and British, or the inquisitive system favored
by the French and Soviets. The Allies agree to prohibit the use
of
the defense of superior orders, although they agree to allow its
consideration
in mitigation of sentence.
July 7, 1945
Robert Jackson visits Nuremberg--a city 91% destroyed by Allied
bombs.
He inspects the Palace of Justice and decides to recommend it as a site
for the upcoming trials. The Soviets prefer that the trials take
place in Berlin, within their zone of occupation.
July 21, 1945
Jackson returns to Nuremberg with British and French
representatives.
They inspect possible housing accomodations.
August 8, 1945
The London Agreement is signed by the Allies, enabling the prosecution
of war criminals.
August 12, 1945
Major war criminals that had been housed in Luxembourg are flown to
Nuremberg, where they are incarcerated in a prison adjacent to the
Palace
of Justice.
September 5, 1945
Robert Jackson meets with President Truman. Truman proposes
naming
former attorney general Francis Biddle as the American judge at
Nuremberg.
Jackson, who does not think highly of Biddle, suggests alternatives,
but
Biddle gets the appointment.
October 14, 1945
British representative Sir Geoffrey Lawrence is elected President of
the International Military Tribunal (IMT).
October 19, 1945
Indictments are issued against the major war figures.
October 25, 1945
Robert Ley, former chief of the German Labor Front and one of the
prisoners
awaiting trial, commits suicide.
November 20, 1945
The trial of the major war criminals by the International Military
Tribunal begins at 10 a.m. in Nuremberg, Germany.
November 21, 1945
The defendants enter their pleas of "Not Guilty." Goering tries
to make a statement, but is prevented by the Court from doing so.
Justice
Robert Jackson delivers his opening statement for the prosecution.
November 29, 1945
The prosecution introduces a film shot by Allied photographers in
liberated
areas. The graphic footage of Nazi horrors causes weeping in the
courtroom. Some defendants appeared shocked by what they see;
others
seem bored.
December 13, 1945
The prosecution introduces grissly evidence from Buechenwald
concentration
camp. Items include tattoed human skin (favored by the
commandant's
wife for use in tablelamps and other household furnishings) and the
head
of an executed Pole used as a paperweight by Commandant Karl Koch.
December 18, 1945
The prosecution begin introducing evidence to prove the criminality
of seven German organizations: the Nazi party leadership, the German
High
Command, the SS, the SA, the SD, the Reich Cabinet, and the Gestapo.
January 4, 1946
Colonel Telford Taylor makes the prosecution case against the German
High Command. His impressive performance will help secure his
appointment
as lead prosecutor in the subsequent Nuremberg trials.
January 8, 1946
The prosecution begin its case against individual defendants.
January 28, 1946
During the French phase of the prosecution, French journalist Marie
Claude Vaillant-Courturier provides heart-wrenching eyewitness
testimony
of atrocities at Auschwitz.
February 11-12, 1946
Chief Soviet Prosecutor Roman Rudenko examines Field Marshal Friedrich
Paulus, who provides testimony relating to German activities in the
eastern
Europe that incriminates Goering, Jodl, and Keitel.
February 16, 1946
The decision is made to end the practice of allowing all the defendants
to eat together on days the court is in session. From this date
on,
the defendants eat in groups of four--except for Goering who is left to
eat alone in an attempt to reduce his influence over the rest of the
defendants.
February 18, 1946
Russian prosecutors offer into evidence a 45-minute film, including
footage from captured German films, showing shocking evidence of
atrocities.
March 5, 1946
In Fulton, Missouri, Winston Churchill delivers his famous "Iron
Curtain"
speech, urging the West to unite against the Soviets.
March 6, 1946
The Soviets finish their presentation and the prosecution rests.
The news of Churchill's speech gives the defendants renewed hope.
March 8, 1946
The defense begins its case.
March 13, 1946
Goering begins his testimony.
March 18-22, 1946
Goering is cross-examined.
March 29, 1946
Robert Jackson appoints Telford Taylor to succeed him as chief
prosecutor
in the subsequent Nuremberg trials.
April 1-2, 1946
Ribbentrop testifies.
April 11, 1946
Kaletenbrunner testifies.
April 1-, 1946
Rudolf Hoess (not to be confused with defendant Rudolf Hess),
commandant
at Auschwitz concentration camp, provides graphic testimony of mass
executions
at his camp.
April 18, 1946
Hans Frank testifies.
April 26, 1946
Julius Streicher testifies
April 30, 1946
Hjalmar Schact testifies.
May 3, 1946
Walther Funk testifies.
May 8, 1946
Grand Admiral Karl Donitz testifies.
May 20, 1946
Grand Admiral Erich Raeder testifies.
May 23, 1946
Baldur von Schirach testifies.
May 28, 1946
Fritz Sauckel testifies.
June 3, 1946
General Alfred Jodl testifies.
June 10, 1946
Arthur Seyss-Inquart testifies.
June 14, 1946
Franz von Papen testifies.
June 21, 1946
Albert Speer testifies.
July 4, 1946
Defense summations begin in the Major War Criminals Trial.
July 26, 1946
The prosecution begins its summation in the Major War Criminals Trial.
July 30, 1946
The defense of the seven indicted Nazi organizations begins.
August 20, 1946
Goering returns to the witness stand.
August 30, 1946
Testimony is completed in the Major War Criminals Trial.
August 31, 1946
Defendants make their final statements.
September 2, 1946
The justices meet to discuss verdicts in the Major War Criminals Trial.
October 1, 1946
The verdicts against the major war criminals are handed down by the
International Military Tribunal. Eleven of the twenty-one
defendants
are sentenced to death.
October 13, 1946
The Allied Control Council--with the power to reduce or commute
sentences--rejects
all appeal in the Major War Criminals Trial.
October 15, 1946
Goering commits suicide by swallowing a smuggled cyanide pill.
October 16, 1946
Ten of the war criminals are hanged in Nuremberg.
October 25, 1946
The United States Military Government for Germany establishes Military
Tribunal I, which will try twenty-three Nazi physicians in the first of
eleven subsequent trials in Nuremberg.
April 10, 1947
Military Tribunal II-A sentences twenty convicted defendants in the
Einsatzgruppen Trial. Fourteen of the defendants, members of
German
mobile killing units, are sentenced to death.
August 21, 1947
Military Tribunal I sentences sixteen Nazi doctors found guilty in
the Doctors Trial. Seven doctors are sentenced to death.
December 4, 1947
Military Tribunal III sentences ten convicted officials in the Reich
Ministry of Justice and judges of the People's and Special Courts, as
the
Justice Trial concludes.
April 13, 1949
Military Tribunal IV-A sentences nineteen defendants found guilty in
the Ministries Trial, a trial involving three Reich Ministers and
eighteen
other members of the Nazi party hierarchry accused of war crims and
crimes
against humanity. Although appeals continue in this case until
January
of 1951, sentencing in the Ministries Trial brings an end to the
four-year-long
series of Nuremberg trials.
Chronology
II: Keys Dates Concerning the Rise and Fall of the Nazi Regime
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