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Nuremberg Trials

link to book in the catalog:Justice at Nuremberg by Robert E. Conot
link to book in the catalog: Killing the SS : the hunt for the worst war criminals in history by Bill O'Reilly
link to audiobook in hoopla: justice at nuremberg
link to book in the catalog:  the enigma of the Nazi war criminals by Joel Dimsdale
link to book in freading:  Login to Download Doctors Of Infamy: The Story Of The Nazi Medical Crimes by  Alexander Mitscherlich & Fred Mielke,
link to book in catalog: The 40s : the story of a decade by The New Yorker

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The Nuremberg Trials

After the war, the top surviving German leaders were tried for Nazi Germany’s crimes, including the crimes of the Holocaust. Their trial was held before an International Military Tribunal (IMT) in Nuremberg, Germany. Judges from the Allied powers—Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States—presided over the hearing of 22 major Nazi criminals. Subsequently, the United States held 12 additional trials in Nuremberg of high-level officials of the German government, military, and SS as well as medical professionals and leading industrialists. The crimes charged before the Nuremberg courts were crimes against peace, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and conspiracy to commit any of the foregoing crimes.

In all, 199 defendants were tried at Nuremberg, 161 were convicted and 37 were sentenced to death, including 12 of those tried by the IMT. Holocaust crimes were included in a few of the trials but were the major focus of only the US trial of Einsatzgruppen leaders. The defendants generally acknowledged that the crimes they were accused of occurred but denied that they were responsible, as they were following orders from a higher authority. 

The Nazis' highest authority, the person most to blame for the Holocaust, was missing at the trials. Adolf Hitler had committed suicide in the final days of the war, as had several of his closest aides. Many more criminals were never tried. Some fled Germany to live abroad, including hundreds who came to the United States. Trials of Nazis continued to take place both in Germany and many other countries. Simon Wiesenthal, a Nazi-hunter, provided leads for war crimes investigators about Adolf Eichmann. Eichmann, who had helped plan and carry out the deportations of millions of Jews, was brought to trial in Israel. Continue reading from US Holocaust Memorial Museum

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"We are not makers of history.  We are made by history" - Martin Luther King, Jr.