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纽伦堡的审判 Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) 1080p 中文字幕

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    I didn't know it was so bad.
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    Couple of incendiaries,
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    these old buildings go up like cellophane.
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    There's a wall that separates
    the old section of Nuremberg from the new.
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    Goes back to…
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    How far does it go back, Schmidt?
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    1219, sir.
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    1219.
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    This is where the Nazi Party
    held their rallies, isn't it?
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    They all came here.
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    Hitler. Goebbels. The whole crew.
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    Thousands of them, from all over Germany.
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    Does he have to blow
    that damn horn so much?
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    It's not necessary
    to blow the horn so much, Schmidt.
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    You both know your duties?
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    Well, here we are.
    A little bit of old Germany.
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    -Senator Burkette.
    -Captain.
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    Captain Byers, this is Judge Haywood.
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    Byers here will be your aide.
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    My what?
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    Clerk. General guide. Liaison.
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    Any capacity you wish to use me in.
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    Oh.
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    This will be your staff, sir.
    Mr. And Mrs. Halbestadt.
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    Hello.
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    Good afternoon.
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    Good afternoon, Your Honor.
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    Welcome.
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    You've already met your driver,
    Schmidt.
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    I am at your service, sir,
    any time you need me. Day or night.
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    Thanks.
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    Let's show him around
    the rest of the place. Dan?
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    We're in the, uh, reception room.
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    Living room. Study is in there.
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    There are two bedrooms
    on this floor, three upstairs.
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    Furniture is part antique, part U.S. Army.
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    The piano's showing
    signs of wear and tear,
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    but it's a genuine Bechstein.
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    Quite a view, isn't it, sir?
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    Yes.
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    Uh, Senator, I really,
    really don't need all this.
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    When the United States
    government does something,
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    it does it right. You know that, Dan.
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    Who used to live here?
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    An important Nazi
    general and his wife, sir.
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    Well, let's see. Is there anything
    else Judge Haywood ought to know?
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    Sir, are there any questions?
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    Yes. Yes.
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    You're West Point, aren't you, Captain?
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    Yes, sir.
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    What's your first name?
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    Harrison. Harry.
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    Well, Harry, look, I'm not West Point.
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    And all this formality
    kind of gets me down a little,
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    not to say puts me ill at ease.
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    Uh… Uh, do you think it would be too
    much an infraction of the rules
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    if you were to call me Judge,
    or Dan, or something?
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    Okay, Judge.
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    We do all our shopping
    at the army commissary.
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    There isn't enough food
    at the local markets for the Germans.
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    The driver knows where the commissary is.
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    Here's a copy of the
    indictment of the case.
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    -I thought you might want to look it over.
    -Oh, thanks.
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    I hope you'll be comfortable here, sir.
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    Captain, I think the whole state of Maine
    would be comfortable here.
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    My office is next to yours at the
    Palace of Justice if you need anything.
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    Thank you.
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    Senator?
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    Do you… Do you think
    I really need the three servants?
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    It kind of makes me feel like a damn fool.
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    Well, it helps them out, as well as you.
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    You see, here they eat.
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    Oh.
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    Well, I need three servants.
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    It's good to have you here, Dan.
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    Good to have a man of your stature here.
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    Sure. Sure.
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    I was the only man
    in America qualified for this job.
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    Senator, you know I wasn't the
    first choice, nor even the 10th.
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    You know it, and I know it.
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    What do you mean?
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    Well, let's face it.
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    Hitler is gone, Goebbels is gone.
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    Goering is gone. Committed suicide
    before they could hang him.
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    Now we're down
    to the business of judging the doctors,
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    businessmen and judges.
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    Some people think
    they shouldn't be judged at all.
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    So?
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    So it makes for a hell
    of a lack of candidates for the job.
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    You had to beat the backwoods of Maine
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    to come up with a hick like me.
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    I hope you're not sorry you came.
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    No. I'm not sorry I came.
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    I just wanted you to know that
    I know where the body is buried.
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    No, I think the trials should go on.
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    Especially the trials
    of the German judges.
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    I hope I'm up to it.
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    You're up to it.
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    Well, relax.
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    Thanks.
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    Enjoy this place while you can.
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    You're going to be a pretty busy fellow.
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    Well, thanks, Senator.
    Thanks for everything.
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    See you tomorrow, Judge.
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    Right.
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    Shall we, uh, take these upstairs?
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    Oh, yes, yes. Thank you.
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    Here, I can take that…
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    No, let me take it. Please.
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    Here they come.
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    The tribunal is now in session.
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    God bless the United States
    and this honorable tribunal.
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    The tribunal will now arraign
    the defendants.
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    The microphone will be placed
    in front of the defendant,
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    Emil Hahn.
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    Emil Hahn?
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    Are you represented
    by counsel before this tribunal?
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    Not guilty.
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    The question was, are you represented
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    by counsel before this tribunal?
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    I am represented.
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    How do you plead
    to the charges and specifications
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    in the indictment against you?
    Guilty or not guilty?
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    Not guilty on all counts.
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    Fried rich Hoffstetter?
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    Are you represented
    by counsel before this tribunal?
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    I am represented.
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    How do you plead? Guilty or not guilty?
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    You may be seated.
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    Werner Lammpe?
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    Are you represented
    by counsel before this tribunal?
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    Counsel?
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    Yes. Yes, of course. I am represented.
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    How do you plead to the charges?
    Guilty or not guilty?
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    You may be seated.
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    Ernst Janning?
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    Ernst Janning, are you
    represented by counsel
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    before this tribunal?
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    Ernst Janning, are you represented
    by counsel before this tribunal?
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    I represent the defendant, Your Honor.
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    How do you plead to the
    charges and specifications set forth
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    in the indictment against you?
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    Guilty or not guilty?
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    Your Honor, may I address the court?
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    The defendant does not
    recognize the authority of this tribunal
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    and wishes to lodge
    a formal protest in lieu of pleading.
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    A plea of "not guilty" will be entered.
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    The prosecution will begin
    its opening address.
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    Slow and easy, junior.
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    The case is unusual
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    in that the defendants
    are charged with crimes
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    committed in the name of the law.
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    These men, together with their
    deceased or fugitive colleagues,
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    are the embodiment
    of what passed for justice
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    during the Third Reich.
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    The defendants served as judges
    during the period of the Third Reich.
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    Therefore, you, Your Honors,
    as judges on the bench,
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    will be sitting in judgment
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    of judges in the dock.
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    And this is as it should be.
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    For only a judge knows how much more
    a court is than a courtroom.
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    It is a process and a spirit.
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    It is the house of law.
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    The defendants knew this, too.
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    They knew courtrooms well.
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    They sat in their black robes,
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    and they distorted, they perverted,
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    they destroyed justice and law in Germany.
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    Will the prosecution
    please watch the light?
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    The interpreter cannot follow you.
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    I'm sorry, Your Honor.
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    They distorted, they perverted,
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    they destroyed justice and law in Germany.
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    Now, this in itself
    is undoubtedly a great crime.
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    But the prosecution
    is not calling the defendants
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    to account for violating
    constitutional guarantees
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    or withholding due process of law.
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    The prosecution is calling them to account
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    for murder,
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    brutalities,
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    torture,
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    atrocities.
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    They share with all
    the leaders of the Third Reich
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    responsibility for the most malignant,
    the most calculated,
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    the most devastating crimes
    in the history of all mankind.
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    And they are perhaps more guilty
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    than some of the others.
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    For they had attained maturity
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    long before Hitler's rise to power.
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    Their minds weren't warped
    at an early age by Nazi teachings.
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    They embraced the ideologies
    of the Third Reich
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    as educated adults
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    when they, most of all,
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    should have valued justice.
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    Well, here they'll
    receive the justice they denied others.
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    They'll be judged according to the
    evidence presented in this courtroom.
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    The prosecution asks nothing more.
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    Herr Rolfe will make
    the opening statement for the defense.
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    May it please the tribunal…
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    It is not only a great honor…
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    But also a great challenge
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    for an advocate
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    to aid this tribunal in its task.
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    The entire civilized world
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    will follow closely what we do here.
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    For this is not an ordinary trial
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    by any means of the accepted,
    parochial sense.
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    The avowed purpose of this tribunal…
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    Is broader than the visiting
    of retribution on a few men.
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    It is dedicated to the reconsecration
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    of the temple of justice.
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    It is dedicated to
    finding a code of justice
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    the whole world will be responsible to.
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    How will this code be established?
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    It will be established…
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    In a clear,
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    honest evaluation
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    of the responsibility for the crimes
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    in the indictment stated
    by the prosecution.
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    In the words of the great American
    jurist, Oliver Wendell Holmes,
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    "This responsibility will not
    be found only in documents
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    "that no one contests or denies.
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    "It will be found in considerations
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    "of a political or social nature.
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    "It will be found, most of all,
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    "in the character of men."
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    What is the character of Ernst Janning?
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    Let us examine his life for a moment.
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    He was born in 1885.
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    Received the degree
    of Doctor of Law in 1907.
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    Became a judge in East Prussia in 1940.
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    Following World War I he became
    one of the leaders of the Weimar Republic
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    and was one of the framers of
    its democratic constitution.
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    In subsequent years
    he achieved international fame
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    not only for his work as a great jurist,
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    but also as the author of legal text books
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    which are still used in universities
    all over the world.
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    He became Minister of Justice
    in Germany in 1935.
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    If Ernst Janning is to be found guilty,
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    certain implications must arise.
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    A judge does not make the laws.
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    He carries out the laws of his country.
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    The statement,
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    "My country, right or wrong"
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    was expressed by a great American patriot.
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    It is no less true for a German patriot.
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    Should Ernst Janning
    have carried out the laws of his country?
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    Or should he have refused
    to carry them out and become a traitor?
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    This is the crux of the issue
    at the bottom of this trial.
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    The defense is as dedicated
    to finding responsibility
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    as is the prosecution.
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    For it is not only Ernst
    Janning who is on trial here…
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    It is the German people.
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    The tribunal will recess
    until further notification.
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    Yeah.
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    If it's all right with you,
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    Byers can file these briefs later.
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    Hmm.
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    That was quite a damning speech
    by Colonel Lawson, wasn't it?
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    I wonder if those men in the dock
    can really be responsible
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    for the things he
    listed in the indictment.
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    Well, I've been here for two years,
    and after you're here that long,
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    you find that responsibility
    is not a cut-and-dried thing.
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    What are you fellows up to
    over the weekend?
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    My wife and I are going to Liège.
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    There's nothing in Liège. I've been there.
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    My son was in the 101st.
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    He's buried
    in the American cemetery outside Liège.
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    Oh, I'm sorry.
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    Oh, that's all right.
    See you Monday, Dan.
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    Hmm.
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    Coming my way?
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    No, I'm going to stay here for a moment.
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    I'm waiting for some records from Byers.
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    Right.
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    Here are the reports you asked for, sir.
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    Oh, thank you.
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    Captain, do you think
    you can get me a copy
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    of the books Ernst Janning wrote?
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    There are quite a few of them.
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    I'd like all of them.
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    And also a copy of the
    Weimar Constitution.
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    Do you think you can get that for me?
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    -Yes, of course.
    -Thank you.
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    How long have you been here, Captain?
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    Two years.
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    Two years? That's a long time.
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    Yes, sir.
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    Any friends?
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    Sure.
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    German friends?
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    Yes.
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    A girl?
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    Yes.
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    Her parents were Nazis, but
    she was eight years old when they came in.
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    I didn't ask you that.
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    I know. But maybe you were thinking it.
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    It's natural to think about it.
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    I thought if anybody was
    going to indoctrinate her,
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    -it might as well be me.
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    Will there be anything else?
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    No, no, I think I'll just
    take a walk around town on my own.
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    Try the old section. Everyone stops
    for a beer and a sausage there.
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    Thank you.
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    Do you understand English?
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    Yes, a little.
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    What did she say?
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    She said, "Goodbye, grandpa."
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    Are they treating you all right?
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    Yes.
    They're treating me all right.
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    We still have some friends
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    who have contact
    with the American authorities.
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    I can tell them
    if they're not treating you all right.
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    They're treating me all right.
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    Dr. Janning…
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    We are both in an embarrassing position.
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    I know you didn't want me as your counsel.
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    I know you didn't want anyone.
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    But I must tell you something.
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    Will you listen to me?
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    Yes.
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    I intend to represent your case
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    with complete dignity.
  • 26:28 - 26:30
    There will be
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    no appeal to sentiment,
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    there will be no falling
    at the mercy of the court.
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    The game
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    will be played according
    to their own rules.
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    We'll see whether they have the courage
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    to sit in judgment on a man like you.
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    The way I see it,
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    the most important elements in the case
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    are the sterilization decrees,
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    and the Feldenstein-Hoffman affair.
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    Dr. Janning, I must tell you something.
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    I admired you
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    since I was a boy in the university.
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    It was because I thought
    I might be able to achieve
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    some of the things you have done…
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    That saw me through the war.
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    You have been somebody to look up to,
    for all of us.
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    Is that all, Herr Rolfe?
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    Yes.
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    Thank you.
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    Dr. Wieck, do you know the defendant,
    Ernst Janning?
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    Yes, I know him.
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    Will you tell us in what capacity?
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    We served
    in the Ministry of Justice together,
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    from 1929 till 1935.
  • 28:21 - 28:23
    Did you know him before that?
  • 28:23 - 28:24
    Yes.
  • 28:25 - 28:27
    He was a law student of mine.
  • 28:27 - 28:29
    -Did you know him well?
    -Yes.
  • 28:29 - 28:31
    -Was he a protégé of yours?
    -Yes.
  • 28:31 - 28:32
    Why?
  • 28:33 - 28:36
    He was always a man of great intelligence.
  • 28:37 - 28:41
    He was a man born
    with the qualities of a great legal mind.
  • 28:42 - 28:45
    Dr. Weick, would you, uh,
  • 28:46 - 28:49
    would you tell us
    from your own experience,
  • 28:50 - 28:52
    the position of the judge in Germany
  • 28:52 - 28:55
    prior to the advent of Adolf Hitler.
  • 28:56 - 29:00
    The position of the judge was
    one of complete independence.
  • 29:00 - 29:01
    Mmm-hmm.
  • 29:01 - 29:05
    Now, would you describe the contrast,
    if any,
  • 29:05 - 29:09
    after the coming to power
    of National Socialism in 1933?
  • 29:10 - 29:15
    Judges became subject
    to something outside of objective justice.
  • 29:16 - 29:19
    They became subject to what was necessary
  • 29:19 - 29:21
    for the protection of the country.
  • 29:22 - 29:23
    Would you explain this, please?
  • 29:24 - 29:26
    The first consideration of the judge
  • 29:26 - 29:29
    became the punishment
    of acts against the state,
  • 29:29 - 29:32
    rather than objective
    consideration of the case.
  • 29:33 - 29:35
    And what other changes were there?
  • 29:36 - 29:39
    The right to appeal was eliminated.
  • 29:40 - 29:43
    The supreme court of the Reich
    was replaced by
  • 29:44 - 29:46
    people's and special courts.
  • 29:47 - 29:52
    The concept of race was made
    a legal concept for the first time.
  • 29:53 - 29:55
    And what was the result of this?
  • 29:56 - 29:57
    The result?
  • 29:59 - 30:03
    The result was to hand over
    the administration of justice
  • 31:57 - 31:59
    into the hands of the dictatorship.
  • 32:00 - 32:01
    Now, Dr. Wieck…
  • 32:01 - 32:04
    Colonel Lawson,
    I would like to ask a few questions.
  • 32:05 - 32:10
    Did the judiciary protest these
    laws abridging their independence?
  • 32:10 - 32:11
    A few of them did.
  • 32:12 - 32:15
    Those who did resigned,
    or were forced to resign.
  • 32:16 - 32:18
    Others…
  • 32:19 - 32:22
    Adapted themselves to the new situation.
  • 32:24 - 32:28
    Do you think the judiciary was aware
    of the consequences to come?
  • 32:29 - 32:31
    At first, perhaps not.
  • 32:31 - 32:36
    Later it became
    clear to anyone who had eyes and ears.
  • 32:37 - 32:38
    Thank you.
  • 32:40 - 32:42
    Now, would you please describe for us
  • 32:42 - 32:44
    the changes in criminal law?
  • 32:45 - 32:47
    It was characterized by
  • 32:47 - 32:50
    an ever-increasing inflation
    of the death penalty.
  • 32:51 - 32:54
    Sentences were passed against defendants
  • 32:54 - 32:57
    just because they were Poles, or Jews,
  • 32:57 - 32:59
    or politically undesirable.
  • 33:01 - 33:04
    Novel National Socialist measures
    were introduced.
  • 33:05 - 33:06
    Among them,
  • 33:06 - 33:10
    sexual sterilization for those
    who were categorized as asocial.
  • 33:11 - 33:13
    Did it become necessary for judges
  • 33:13 - 33:18
    to wear any distinctive mark
    on their robes in 1935?
  • 33:18 - 33:21
    The so-called Fuehrer's decree
  • 33:21 - 33:23
    required judges to wear the insignia
  • 33:23 - 33:25
    of the swastika on their robes.
  • 33:25 - 33:27
    Did you wear such an insignia?
  • 33:27 - 33:28
    No.
  • 33:29 - 33:31
    I would have been ashamed to wear it.
  • 33:31 - 33:33
    Did you resign in 1935?
  • 33:33 - 33:35
    Yes, sir.
  • 33:35 - 33:39
    Did Ernst Janning wear
    a swastika on his robe?
  • 33:43 - 33:44
    Yes.
  • 33:45 - 33:47
    That's all. Thank you.
  • 33:51 - 33:53
    Herr Rolfe.
  • 34:05 - 34:07
    You used the phrase, "What was necessary
  • 34:07 - 34:10
    "for the protection of the country."
  • 34:11 - 34:14
    Will you explain for the tribunal
    the conditions in Germany
  • 34:14 - 34:16
    at the time National Socialism
    came to power?
  • 34:17 - 34:19
    What conditions?
  • 34:22 - 34:25
    Would you say
    there was widespread hunger?
  • 34:25 - 34:26
    Yes.
  • 34:26 - 34:29
    Would you say there was internal disunity?
  • 34:29 - 34:30
    Yes.
  • 34:30 - 34:32
    Was there a Communist Party?
  • 34:32 - 34:33
    Yes.
  • 34:33 - 34:35
    Was it the third largest party in Germany?
  • 34:35 - 34:37
    Hmm, yes.
  • 34:38 - 34:39
    Would you say
  • 34:40 - 34:44
    that National Socialism
    helped to cure some of these conditions?
  • 34:46 - 34:48
    Yes, but at a terrible price and I…
  • 34:48 - 34:52
    Please confine yourself
    to answering the questions only.
  • 34:53 - 34:55
    Therefore, was it not possible
  • 34:55 - 34:57
    that a judge might wear a swastika
  • 34:57 - 35:00
    and yet work for what he
    thought was best for his country?
  • 35:00 - 35:02
    No. It was not possible.
  • 35:06 - 35:07
    Dr. Wieck…
  • 35:10 - 35:12
    You were not in the administration
  • 35:12 - 35:17
    from the years 1935 to 1943
  • 35:17 - 35:19
    by your own admission.
  • 35:20 - 35:24
    Is it not possible
    that your view of the administration
  • 35:25 - 35:27
    might be distorted?
  • 35:27 - 35:29
    No. It is not.
  • 35:31 - 35:35
    How… How can you testify about
    what was going on in the administration
  • 35:35 - 35:36
    if you were not there?
  • 35:37 - 35:39
    I had many friends
    in the legal administration.
  • 35:39 - 35:41
    There were journals and books.
  • 35:43 - 35:46
    From journals and books?
  • 35:50 - 35:51
    I see.
  • 35:53 - 35:56
    Dr. Wieck, you referred to,
  • 35:56 - 35:58
    "Novel National Socialist
    measures introduced,
  • 35:58 - 36:01
    "among them sexual sterilization."
  • 36:02 - 36:04
    Are you aware that sexual sterilization
  • 36:04 - 36:06
    was not invented by National Socialism,
  • 36:06 - 36:09
    but had been advanced
    for years before as a weapon
  • 36:09 - 36:12
    in dealing with the mentally
    incompetent and the criminal?
  • 36:12 - 36:14
    Yes. I am aware of that.
  • 36:14 - 36:16
    Are you aware that it has advocates
  • 36:16 - 36:19
    among leading citizens
    in many other countries?
  • 36:19 - 36:21
    I am not an expert on such laws.
  • 36:22 - 36:25
    Then permit me to read one to you.
  • 36:27 - 36:30
    This is a high court opinion
  • 36:31 - 36:35
    upholding such laws in existence
    in another country.
  • 36:37 - 36:39
    And I quote…
  • 36:44 - 36:46
    "We have seen more than once
    that the public welfare
  • 36:46 - 36:49
    "may call upon
    the best citizens for their lives.
  • 36:49 - 36:53
    "It would be strange indeed,
    if it could not call upon those
  • 36:53 - 36:57
    "who already sapped the strength
    of the state for these lesser sacrifices
  • 36:57 - 37:00
    "in order to prevent
    our being swamped by incompetence.
  • 37:00 - 37:02
    "It is better for all the world
  • 37:02 - 37:05
    "if, instead of waiting
    to execute degenerate offsprings for crime
  • 37:05 - 37:07
    "or to let them starve
    for their imbecility,
  • 37:07 - 37:10
    "society can prevent their propagation
  • 37:10 - 37:13
    "by medical means in the first place.
  • 37:16 - 37:19
    "Three generations of imbeciles
    are enough."
  • 37:23 - 37:25
    Do you recognize it now, Dr. Wieck?
  • 37:25 - 37:27
    No, sir, I don't.
  • 37:28 - 37:31
    Actually, there is
    no particular reason you should,
  • 37:32 - 37:34
    since the opinion upholds
    the sterilization law
  • 37:34 - 37:37
    in the state of Virginia,
    of the United States,
  • 37:38 - 37:41
    and was written and delivered
    by that great American jurist,
  • 37:41 - 37:46
    Supreme Court Justice,
    Oliver Wendell Holmes.
  • 37:56 - 37:59
    Now, Dr. Wieck.
  • 38:00 - 38:02
    In view of what you have just learned,
  • 38:02 - 38:05
    can you still say that
    sexual sterilization
  • 38:05 - 38:07
    was a novel National Socialist measure?
  • 38:08 - 38:09
    Yes, I can say it.
  • 38:10 - 38:12
    Because it was never before used
  • 38:12 - 38:14
    as a weapon against political opponents.
  • 38:17 - 38:18
    Do you personally know of a case
  • 38:18 - 38:22
    where someone was sterilized
    for political reasons?
  • 38:22 - 38:24
    I know that such things were done.
  • 38:24 - 38:25
    That's not the question.
  • 38:26 - 38:28
    Please answer the question.
  • 38:28 - 38:29
    Do you know of a case?
  • 38:30 - 38:34
    I don't know of any specific case,
    or specific date…
  • 38:34 - 38:36
    I am asking you if you have any firsthand,
  • 38:36 - 38:37
    personal knowledge of such a case!
  • 38:39 - 38:42
    No, I have no such personal knowledge.
  • 38:42 - 38:43
    Thank you.
  • 38:53 - 38:54
    Dr. Wieck…
  • 38:59 - 39:01
    You are aware
  • 39:01 - 39:04
    of the charges
    in the indictment against Ernst Janning?
  • 39:10 - 39:11
    Yes, I am.
  • 39:13 - 39:17
    Can you honestly say
    he is responsible for them?
  • 39:19 - 39:20
    Yes, I can.
  • 39:22 - 39:26
    Do you consider yourself
    free of responsibility?
  • 39:29 - 39:30
    Yes, I do.
  • 39:32 - 39:33
    Dr. Wieck,
  • 39:35 - 39:39
    did you ever swear
    to the Civil Servant Loyalty Oath of 1934?
  • 39:39 - 39:41
    Your Honor, I object.
  • 39:41 - 39:43
    The witness doesn't have
    to answer that question.
  • 39:43 - 39:45
    He's not on trial.
  • 39:46 - 39:48
    All Germany is on trial, Your Honor.
  • 39:48 - 39:51
    This tribunal placed it on trial
    when it placed Ernst Janning on trial.
  • 39:51 - 39:53
    If responsibility is to be found,
  • 39:53 - 39:56
    the widest latitude is to be permitted.
  • 39:57 - 39:59
    Objection overruled.
  • 40:00 - 40:04
    Did you ever swear
    to the Civil Servant Loyalty Oath of 1934?
  • 40:06 - 40:07
    Everyone did.
  • 40:08 - 40:10
    We are not interested
    in what everyone did.
  • 40:10 - 40:13
    We are interested in what you did.
  • 40:13 - 40:17
    Would you read the oath
    from the Reich Law Gazette, March, 1933?
  • 40:18 - 40:20
    "I swear that I shall be obedient
  • 40:20 - 40:23
    "to the leader of the German Reich
    and people, Adolf Hitler.
  • 40:23 - 40:26
    "That I shall be loyal to him,
    that I will observe the laws,
  • 40:26 - 40:29
    "and that
    I will conscientiously fulfill my duties,
  • 40:29 - 40:30
    "so help me God."
  • 40:31 - 40:33
    Everyone swore to it.
  • 40:34 - 40:36
    It was mandatory.
  • 40:38 - 40:39
    Yes.
  • 40:41 - 40:44
    But you're such
    a perceptive man, Dr. Wieck.
  • 40:45 - 40:47
    You could see what was coming.
  • 40:47 - 40:49
    You could see that National Socialism
  • 40:49 - 40:52
    was leading Germany to disaster.
  • 40:52 - 40:55
    "It was clear to anyone
    who had eyes and ears."
  • 40:57 - 40:58
    Didn't you realize
  • 40:59 - 41:03
    what it would have meant
    if you, and men like you,
  • 41:04 - 41:07
    would have refused to swear to the oath?
  • 41:07 - 41:09
    It would have meant
  • 41:09 - 41:12
    that Hitler could never
    have come to absolute power.
  • 41:15 - 41:16
    Why didn't you?
  • 41:17 - 41:19
    Dr. Wieck, why didn't you?
  • 41:20 - 41:23
    Can you give us an explanation?
  • 41:24 - 41:26
    Has it something to do with your pension?
  • 41:26 - 41:28
    Did your pension mean more to you
    than your country?
  • 41:29 - 41:30
    Your Honor, Your Honor!
  • 41:30 - 41:32
    I object to the entire
    line of questioning,
  • 41:32 - 41:35
    and ask that it be
    stricken from the record.
  • 41:35 - 41:36
    I thought prosecuting counsel
  • 41:36 - 41:38
    was dedicated to finding responsibility.
  • 41:38 - 41:40
    Your Honor, I made an objection.
  • 41:40 - 41:43
    Prosecution is not interested
    in finding responsibility?
  • 41:43 - 41:45
    There is responsibility for more here
  • 41:45 - 41:48
    than swearing to a loyalty oath
    and you know it.
  • 41:48 - 41:50
    -There is indeed.
    -Order.
  • 41:50 - 41:52
    One thing that even the German machine,
  • 41:52 - 41:53
    with its monumental efficiency
  • 41:53 - 41:56
    has been unable to destroy… Order. Order!
  • 41:56 - 41:57
    All the victims.
  • 41:57 - 41:59
    More victims than the world
    has ever known.
  • 41:59 - 42:01
    They will walk into this courtroom…
  • 42:01 - 42:02
    Order! Order!
  • 42:04 - 42:06
    This tribunal will admonish both counsel.
  • 42:06 - 42:08
    It will tolerate nothing
    of this kind again.
  • 42:08 - 42:12
    We're not here to listen to outbursts
    of this kind, but to serve justice.
  • 42:12 - 42:14
    Your Honor, I made an objection.
  • 42:14 - 42:16
    The objection is overruled.
  • 42:17 - 42:19
    The witness is excused.
  • 42:52 - 42:54
    Did you ever read any books by Janning?
  • 42:54 - 42:56
    No, I don't think so.
  • 42:56 - 42:57
    The Meaning of the Law.
  • 42:57 - 42:59
    How is it? Interesting?
  • 42:59 - 43:02
    All the books by Janning are interesting.
    They're more than that.
  • 43:02 - 43:05
    They're a picture of an era,
    its hopes, its aspirations.
  • 43:06 - 43:08
    They weren't very different
    from ours, really.
  • 43:08 - 43:12
    Listen to this, on the signing
    of the Weimar Constitution,
  • 43:12 - 43:16
    "Now we can look forward
    to a Germany without guns and bloodshed,
  • 43:16 - 43:19
    "a Germany of justice,
    where men can live instead of die,
  • 43:20 - 43:23
    "a Germany of purpose,
    of freedom, of humanity,
  • 43:23 - 43:26
    "a Germany that calls
    for the best in man."
  • 43:26 - 43:28
    Now, how could a man
    who wrote words like these
  • 43:28 - 43:30
    be part of sterilizations and murders?
  • 43:30 - 43:31
    How could he be?
  • 43:31 - 43:34
    Dan, there are a lot of things
    that happened here
  • 43:34 - 43:36
    that nobody understands.
  • 43:36 - 43:37
    I know.
  • 43:38 - 43:42
    But the prosecution is going to have to
    prove every inch of its allegation
  • 43:42 - 43:46
    against a man like Janning
    if I'm to pronounce sentence on him.
  • 43:46 - 43:49
    Well, gentlemen, I'm on my way.
    Coming, Ken?
  • 43:49 - 43:50
    Right.
  • 43:51 - 43:52
    Well, there's just this business
  • 43:53 - 43:55
    on the curtailment of rights.
  • 43:55 - 43:56
    Tomorrow.
  • 43:56 - 43:59
    Dan, my wife is planning
    a little get-together
  • 43:59 - 44:02
    tomorrow night at the grand hotel.
    She wants you to come.
  • 44:02 - 44:04
    I thank you.
  • 44:04 - 44:05
    And she'd like to provide you
  • 44:05 - 44:07
    with some kind of female companionship.
  • 44:08 - 44:10
    She has a feeling
    that you might be lonely here.
  • 44:10 - 44:13
    Oh, no. No, thanks, Curtiss.
    Thanks very much.
  • 44:13 - 44:15
    You know how these wives are.
    They love to play cupid.
  • 44:15 - 44:17
    Yeah, well, I think I'll keep it stag.
  • 44:17 - 44:19
    All right. How about you, Ken?
  • 44:19 - 44:21
    Thanks. My wife and I
    have an engagement. Good night.
  • 44:21 - 44:22
    Good night. Good night.
  • 44:22 - 44:24
    -Good night, Dan.
    -Good night.
  • 44:44 - 44:46
    Mrs. Halbestadt, could I…
  • 44:48 - 44:50
    Hello.
  • 44:51 - 44:52
    Hello.
  • 44:53 - 44:56
    Your Honor, this is Madame Bertholt.
  • 44:56 - 44:58
    This is his Honor, Judge Haywood.
  • 45:00 - 45:03
    Madame Bertholt, this is her house.
  • 45:03 - 45:06
    Uh, she came to get
    some of her belongings from the basement.
  • 45:06 - 45:08
    I didn't know she was coming here tonight.
  • 45:08 - 45:10
    This is my responsibility,
    Mrs. Halbestadt.
  • 45:11 - 45:13
    I've been storing some of my things here
  • 45:13 - 45:15
    until I could get a room
    large enough to keep them in.
  • 45:16 - 45:17
    I hope you don't mind.
  • 45:17 - 45:18
    No. No. Not at all.
  • 45:19 - 45:21
    You can examine
    what I have here, if you like.
  • 45:22 - 45:23
    Of course not.
  • 45:23 - 45:25
    Then I'll just take these out.
  • 45:25 - 45:27
    -Thanks, Mrs. Halbestadt.
    -Here. Let me help you.
  • 45:27 - 45:29
    No, no, no. I can manage all right.
  • 45:29 - 45:31
    I'll take these outside. Please.
  • 45:31 - 45:32
    Good night.
  • 45:46 - 45:48
    It's heavy.
    It's full of books and pictures
  • 45:48 - 45:51
    things that mean nothing
    to anyone but me.
  • 45:51 - 45:52
    Mr. Schmidt?
  • 45:53 - 45:54
    Your Honor.
  • 45:55 - 45:58
    Would you drive
    Mrs. Bertholt home, please?
  • 45:58 - 45:59
    Yes, Your Honor.
  • 45:59 - 46:01
    I hope you're comfortable here.
  • 46:01 - 46:02
    Yes, I am. Very.
  • 46:02 - 46:05
    My favorite spot was always the garden.
  • 46:05 - 46:08
    Remind Mr. Halbestadt
    to take good care of the rock garden.
  • 46:08 - 46:11
    You'll get a great deal
    of pleasure out of it in summer.
  • 46:11 - 46:13
    I'll sit in front, thank you.
  • 46:15 - 46:17
    Good night.
  • 46:17 - 46:19
    Karolinenstrasse 115, please.
  • 46:19 - 46:20
    Yes, madam.
  • 46:41 - 46:42
    Sit down. Sit down.
  • 46:44 - 46:46
    Uh, Mrs. Halbestadt,
  • 46:46 - 46:48
    you worked for Mrs. Bertholt, didn't you?
  • 46:50 - 46:51
    Yes, Your Honor.
  • 46:51 - 46:53
    How long did she live here?
  • 46:54 - 46:55
    Madame Bertholt?
  • 46:56 - 46:58
    Oh, Madame Bertholt
    and her family have lived here
  • 46:58 - 47:00
    for many generations, Your Honor.
  • 47:01 - 47:03
    Thank you.
  • 47:05 - 47:08
    Your Honor,
    you came in here for something?
  • 47:08 - 47:09
    Oh, oh, yeah.
  • 47:09 - 47:11
    Well, I was just going
    to make myself a sandwich.
  • 47:12 - 47:13
    Oh, we will make it for you.
  • 47:13 - 47:15
    We will make you anything you want.
  • 47:15 - 47:16
    No. No, it's nothing.
  • 47:16 - 47:18
    I always used to do it
    for myself back home.
  • 47:18 - 47:19
    What would you like?
  • 47:19 - 47:22
    I have some ham
    and cheese and liverwurst.
  • 47:22 - 47:24
    Cheese will be fine.
  • 47:26 - 47:28
    That's very kind of you.
  • 47:36 - 47:37
    Mr. Halbestadt,
  • 47:37 - 47:41
    what was it like,
    uh, living under National Socialism?
  • 47:43 - 47:44
    What was it like?
  • 47:45 - 47:48
    Yes. I mean, uh… Uh, day to day?
  • 47:48 - 47:51
    You know, I know
    many people at home like you.
  • 47:51 - 47:53
    You're good people. I believe that.
  • 47:53 - 47:54
    Uh,
  • 47:55 - 47:58
    what was it like for
    you, living under Hitler?
  • 47:58 - 48:00
    Uh, we were not political.
  • 48:00 - 48:02
    Mr. Halbestadt and I are not political.
  • 48:04 - 48:06
    No, but, uh,
  • 48:06 - 48:10
    you must have been aware
    of some of the events that were going on.
  • 48:13 - 48:15
    Many things were going on, Mr. Halbestadt.
  • 48:16 - 48:17
    There were parades.
  • 48:19 - 48:22
    Hitler and Goebbels came here every year.
  • 48:23 - 48:25
    What was it like?
  • 48:26 - 48:28
    We… We never attended meetings. Never.
  • 48:30 - 48:32
    I'm not trying to put you on trial.
  • 48:32 - 48:35
    I'm just, uh… I'm just curious.
    I'd like to know.
  • 48:36 - 48:38
    Here's your sandwich, Your Honor.
  • 48:38 - 48:39
    Thank you.
  • 48:39 - 48:41
    You're welcome.
  • 48:41 - 48:43
    Thank you.
  • 48:46 - 48:48
    For instance, there was
    a place called Dachau
  • 48:48 - 48:50
    which was not too many miles from here.
  • 48:51 - 48:54
    Did you ever know
    what was going on there?
  • 48:55 - 48:58
    We knew nothing about it.
    Nothing about it.
  • 49:00 - 49:05
    How… How can you ask if…
    If we knew anything about that?
  • 49:07 - 49:08
    I'm sorry.
  • 49:11 - 49:14
    Your Honor, we are only little people.
  • 49:15 - 49:17
    We lost a son in the army
  • 49:19 - 49:21
    and our daughter in the bombing.
  • 49:23 - 49:26
    During the war we almost starved.
  • 49:27 - 49:29
    It was terrible for us.
  • 49:31 - 49:33
    I'm sure it was.
  • 49:35 - 49:39
    Hitler… Hitler did some good things.
  • 49:40 - 49:43
    I won't say he didn't do some good things.
  • 49:44 - 49:45
    He built the Autobahn.
  • 49:46 - 49:48
    He gave more people work.
  • 49:49 - 49:52
    We won't say he didn't do
    some good things.
  • 49:54 - 49:56
    But the… The other things,
  • 49:57 - 50:00
    the things they say
    he did to the Jews and the rest,
  • 50:00 - 50:02
    we knew nothing about that.
  • 50:02 - 50:04
    Very few Germans did.
  • 50:06 - 50:09
    And if we did know,
  • 50:11 - 50:12
    what could we do?
  • 50:13 - 50:15
    But Mrs. Halbestadt said you didn't know.
  • 50:21 - 50:24
    Mrs. Bertholt. How did…
    How did, uh, she react to all this?
  • 50:25 - 50:29
    Oh, Madame Bertholt
    is a very fine woman, Your Honor.
  • 50:29 - 50:32
    I'm sure she is. What about her husband?
  • 50:34 - 50:35
    He was in the army.
  • 50:37 - 50:38
    What happened to him?
  • 50:40 - 50:44
    He was one of the defendants
    in the Malmedy case.
  • 50:48 - 50:51
    General Bertholt. Karl Bertholt.
  • 50:53 - 50:55
    He was executed, Your Honor.
  • 50:57 - 50:59
    Yes, I know that.
  • 51:03 - 51:05
    The document then states that
  • 51:05 - 51:06
    the photographer, Rudolf Lenz,
  • 51:07 - 51:09
    is requested to present himself
    within two weeks
  • 51:09 - 51:11
    at one the hospitals mentioned below
  • 51:12 - 51:15
    for medical treatment.
  • 51:16 - 51:19
    Next, prosecution presents
    affidavit document No. 488
  • 51:19 - 51:22
    which concerns the seamstress,
    Anni Meunch.
  • 51:22 - 51:24
    Document reads as follows,
  • 51:24 - 51:28
    "District Court, Frankfurt am Main,
    has decided the following,
  • 51:28 - 51:32
    "the seamstress, Anni Meunch, daughter of
    Wilhelm Meunch is to be sterilized.
  • 51:32 - 51:35
    "She is therefore requested
    to present herself within two weeks
  • 51:35 - 51:38
    "at one of the hospitals mentioned below.
  • 51:38 - 51:40
    "If she does not
    take herself voluntarily,
  • 51:40 - 51:43
    "she will be taken by force."
  • 51:44 - 51:46
    Next, document no. 449,
  • 51:46 - 51:49
    interrogatories in the German
    and English text
  • 51:49 - 51:52
    concerning the farmer's helper,
    Meyer Eichinger.
  • 51:52 - 51:53
    Your Honor…
  • 51:57 - 51:58
    Defense objects
  • 51:58 - 52:01
    to introduction of these
    repetitive documents.
  • 52:01 - 52:04
    According to the ruling
    of the first tribunal,
  • 52:04 - 52:06
    such documents are not even admissible
  • 52:07 - 52:10
    unless supported by independent
    evidence of their authenticity.
  • 52:12 - 52:13
    Objection sustained.
  • 52:15 - 52:18
    Your Honor, uh,
    may I ask the defense a question?
  • 52:18 - 52:20
    Yes.
  • 52:20 - 52:22
    Would evidence on sterilization
  • 52:22 - 52:24
    be admissible if there were a witness?
  • 52:35 - 52:36
    Yes.
  • 52:36 - 52:37
    Thank you.
  • 52:38 - 52:41
    Prosecution calls the witness,
    Rudolph Petersen.
  • 53:05 - 53:08
    Will you raise your right hand?
  • 53:08 - 53:10
    I swear by God,
    the Almighty and Omniscient,
  • 53:10 - 53:11
    that I will speak the pure truth
  • 53:11 - 53:13
    and withhold and add nothing.
  • 53:14 - 53:15
    Yes, I do.
  • 53:32 - 53:36
    Will you please tell the court your full
    name and place of residence?
  • 53:37 - 53:39
    Rudolph Petersen.
  • 53:39 - 53:42
    Frankfurt am Main, Gratweg Nummer 7.
  • 53:43 - 53:45
    When were you born, Mr. Petersen?
  • 53:46 - 53:48
    May 20, 1914.
  • 53:49 - 53:51
    And, uh, what is your occupation?
  • 53:52 - 53:54
    Baker's helper. I'm a baker's helper.
  • 53:55 - 53:58
    Are your parents living?
  • 53:59 - 54:00
    No.
  • 54:01 - 54:04
    Oh, what were the causes of their deaths?
  • 54:08 - 54:11
    Mr. Petersen, did they…
    Did they die of natural causes?
  • 54:12 - 54:14
    Yeah, yeah, yeah, natural.
  • 54:16 - 54:18
    Mr. Petersen,
  • 54:18 - 54:21
    what political party
    did your father belong to?
  • 54:21 - 54:24
    Communist. The Communist Party.
  • 54:25 - 54:26
    Uh-huh.
  • 54:27 - 54:30
    Now… Now think back.
  • 54:30 - 54:33
    Do you remember anything unusual
  • 54:33 - 54:36
    that happened to you
    and your family in 1933,
  • 54:37 - 54:39
    before the Nazis came to power?
  • 54:40 - 54:43
    I mean, uh, anything of a violent nature.
  • 54:44 - 54:46
    Yeah. Yeah.
  • 54:46 - 54:48
    How old were you at the time?
  • 54:49 - 54:50
    19.
  • 54:51 - 54:54
    Would you please
    tell the court what happened?
  • 54:54 - 54:56
    Uh, some…
  • 54:58 - 55:01
    Some S.A. men
    broke into the house, our house…
  • 55:04 - 55:06
    And they broke the windows and the door,
  • 55:08 - 55:10
    and they called us traitors,
  • 55:11 - 55:15
    and they tried to… To beat up my father.
  • 55:16 - 55:19
    And what happened then?
  • 55:19 - 55:22
    Well, my brothers and I,
    we went to help him.
  • 55:23 - 55:26
    And there was a fight,
  • 55:26 - 55:30
    and finally we got them
    outside in the street
  • 55:30 - 55:31
    and we beat them up,
  • 55:33 - 55:35
    and turned them over to the police.
  • 55:36 - 55:38
    Did the police do anything about it?
  • 55:38 - 55:40
    -No.
    -Why not?
  • 55:41 - 55:42
    It was then,
  • 55:42 - 55:46
    at the time of the…
    Of the national elections.
  • 55:47 - 55:49
    Oh, you mean the time
    the National Socialists
  • 55:49 - 55:50
    came to power?
  • 55:50 - 55:51
    Yeah.
  • 55:51 - 55:53
    Now, Mr. Petersen,
  • 55:54 - 55:57
    what happened after 1933,
  • 55:58 - 56:00
    after the Nazis came to power?
  • 56:00 - 56:03
    I got a job on a farm,
  • 56:04 - 56:08
    but for the work,
    to drive a truck, it was necessary.
  • 56:09 - 56:14
    I went to the city building
    to apply for a license.
  • 56:14 - 56:16
    And what happened there?
  • 56:17 - 56:20
    They took me to an official.
  • 56:21 - 56:25
    Did you ever have any dealings
    with this, uh, official before?
  • 56:26 - 56:28
    He was one of the men
  • 56:30 - 56:32
    who broke into our house that night.
  • 56:33 - 56:35
    What did he say to your application?
  • 56:37 - 56:40
    He said an examination
    there would have to be.
  • 56:41 - 56:44
    Where was the examination to take place?
  • 56:44 - 56:47
    In the District Court of Stuttgart.
  • 56:48 - 56:51
    Who was the presiding
    justice in the court?
  • 56:55 - 56:57
    Justice Hoffstetter.
  • 56:59 - 57:01
    Now, what happened in the courtroom?
  • 57:02 - 57:06
    Uh, they asked me my… My full name and…
  • 57:06 - 57:08
    And so forth.
  • 57:09 - 57:11
    What else did they ask you?
  • 57:12 - 57:17
    They asked me when Adolf Hitler
    and Dr. Goebbels were born.
  • 57:18 - 57:20
    What did you reply?
  • 57:21 - 57:26
    I told them I didn't know,
    and also that I didn't care.
  • 57:32 - 57:35
    Did they, uh,
    did they ask you any more questions?
  • 57:36 - 57:40
    No. They told me that I would be
    hearing from them in 10 days.
  • 57:40 - 57:44
    I see. Now, Mr. Petersen,
  • 57:45 - 57:48
    I'd like you to look at something.
  • 58:01 - 58:03
    Do you recognize it?
  • 58:03 - 58:04
    Yeah.
  • 58:04 - 58:06
    Would you please read it for the tribunal?
  • 58:09 - 58:12
    "District Court of Stuttgart.
  • 58:13 - 58:17
    "The baker, Rudolph Petersen,
    born May 20, 1914,
  • 58:18 - 58:22
    "son of railway employee, Hans Petersen…
  • 58:26 - 58:28
    "Is to be sterilized."
  • 58:29 - 58:32
    Now would you read the last paragraph?
  • 58:37 - 58:40
    "It is therefore requested
  • 58:40 - 58:43
    "he present himself within two weeks
  • 58:43 - 58:46
    "to one of the hospitals mentioned below.
  • 58:48 - 58:50
    "If he does not
  • 58:51 - 58:54
    "betake himself voluntarily…
  • 58:57 - 58:59
    "He will be taken by force."
  • 59:03 - 59:06
    Now, please read the signature
    at the bottom.
  • 59:09 - 59:12
    "Presiding Justice Hoffstetter."
  • 59:16 - 59:19
    Would you read
    what is written below the signature?
  • 59:20 - 59:21
    Below?
  • 59:21 - 59:23
    Below.
  • 59:23 - 59:26
    "By authority of
  • 59:27 - 59:29
    "Ernst Janning,
  • 59:31 - 59:32
    "Minister of Justice."
  • 59:36 - 59:37
    Your Honor…
  • 59:40 - 59:43
    May the defense see the file
    of Mr. Petersen?
  • 59:44 - 59:48
    What did you do after you
    received the letter, Mr. Petersen?
  • 59:48 - 59:53
    I ran away.
    I stayed at the farm of a friend I have.
  • 59:54 - 59:56
    And, uh, did you return?
  • 59:56 - 59:57
    Did I what?
  • 59:57 - 59:59
    Did you return?
  • 59:59 - 60:01
    Yes.
  • 60:01 - 60:03
    And what happened then?
  • 60:04 - 60:06
    The police came.
  • 60:06 - 60:08
    The police came.
  • 60:08 - 60:09
    Where did they take you?
  • 60:12 - 60:14
    To the hospital.
  • 60:14 - 60:17
    Uh, Mr. Petersen, excuse me.
  • 60:17 - 60:20
    I wonder if you could
    speak a little louder, please.
  • 60:22 - 60:23
    To the hospital.
  • 60:24 - 60:25
    And what happened at the hospital?
  • 60:26 - 60:28
    They kept me there.
  • 60:29 - 60:32
    The, uh, the nurse who was…
  • 60:34 - 60:36
    Well, she came in, anyway.
  • 60:36 - 60:39
    She was to prepare me for the operation.
  • 60:39 - 60:44
    And she said she thought
    the whole thing was terrible.
  • 60:47 - 60:51
    And then the doctor came in
    who was supposed to do the…
  • 60:54 - 60:57
    And he said he thought it was awful.
  • 60:59 - 61:02
    Were you, in fact, sterilized?
  • 61:11 - 61:14
    Thank you very much, Mr. Petersen.
  • 61:15 - 61:16
    That's all.
  • 61:19 - 61:20
    Herr Rolfe?
  • 61:30 - 61:34
    Mr. Petersen,
  • 61:34 - 61:38
    You may take your earphones off now,
    if you want to.
  • 61:45 - 61:46
    Mr. Petersen,
  • 61:46 - 61:50
    you say you work as a baker's helper?
    Is that correct?
  • 61:50 - 61:52
    Yes, that is right.
  • 61:54 - 61:56
    What other occupations have you held?
  • 61:56 - 61:59
    I have worked for my father.
  • 62:00 - 62:01
    What did your father do?
  • 62:02 - 62:04
    He was a railroad worker.
  • 62:05 - 62:07
    Yes, but, uh, what did he do?
  • 62:08 - 62:13
    Oh, he would raise and lower the barrier
  • 62:14 - 62:17
    at the crossing, for traffic.
  • 62:20 - 62:23
    And you spoke about your brothers.
  • 62:24 - 62:25
    How many brothers do you have?
  • 62:26 - 62:27
    Five.
  • 62:27 - 62:29
    And sisters?
  • 62:29 - 62:30
    Four.
  • 62:30 - 62:32
    Then you are a family of 10?
  • 62:32 - 62:33
    Yes.
  • 62:36 - 62:38
    What occupations do your brothers have?
  • 62:39 - 62:40
    Laborers.
  • 62:41 - 62:43
    All laborers?
  • 62:43 - 62:44
    I see.
  • 62:46 - 62:48
    Mr. Petersen,
  • 62:48 - 62:51
    you said the court at Stuttgart
    asked you two questions,
  • 62:51 - 62:53
    the birth dates of
    Hitler and Dr. Goebbels.
  • 62:53 - 62:54
    Is that correct?
  • 62:54 - 62:56
    Yes, correct.
  • 62:56 - 62:58
    What else did they ask you?
  • 62:59 - 63:00
    Uh,
  • 63:01 - 63:02
    nothing else.
  • 63:04 - 63:05
    Are you sure?
  • 63:06 - 63:09
    Are you sure there were no questions
    about your schooling?
  • 63:09 - 63:11
    Objection!
  • 63:12 - 63:14
    The witness has already
    answered that question.
  • 63:19 - 63:20
    Objection sustained.
  • 63:26 - 63:27
    May I ask you,
  • 63:29 - 63:30
    Mr. Petersen…
  • 63:33 - 63:35
    May I ask you…
  • 63:38 - 63:40
    How long did you attend school?
  • 63:41 - 63:42
    Six years.
  • 63:42 - 63:45
    Six years? Why not longer?
  • 63:47 - 63:48
    I had to go to work.
  • 63:49 - 63:53
    Would you consider yourself
    a very bright fellow at school?
  • 63:54 - 63:56
    School? It was a…
  • 63:58 - 64:00
    It was a long while ago. I don't…
  • 64:01 - 64:04
    Perhaps you were not able
    to keep up with the others
  • 64:04 - 64:06
    and that's why you did not continue?
  • 64:07 - 64:09
    Objection, Your Honor.
  • 64:09 - 64:12
    The witness' school record has nothing to
    do with what happened to him.
  • 64:12 - 64:14
    It was the task of the health court
  • 64:14 - 64:16
    to sterilize the mentally incompetent.
  • 64:21 - 64:22
    Objection overruled.
  • 64:29 - 64:33
    Were you able, or were you not able
  • 64:34 - 64:36
    to keep up with the others?
  • 64:41 - 64:43
    I would like to refer
    to the efficiency report
  • 64:43 - 64:46
    made at the school about Mr. Petersen.
  • 64:46 - 64:50
    He failed to be promoted, and was
    placed in a class of backward children.
  • 64:55 - 64:59
    You say your parents died
    of natural causes.
  • 64:59 - 65:00
    Yes.
  • 65:00 - 65:04
    Would you describe in detail
    the illness your mother died of?
  • 65:04 - 65:06
    She died of her heart.
  • 65:07 - 65:09
    In the last stages of her illness,
  • 65:09 - 65:15
    did your mother show
    any mental peculiarities?
  • 65:15 - 65:18
    Uh, me… No. No.
  • 65:20 - 65:22
    In the decision
    that came down from Stuttgart,
  • 65:22 - 65:24
    it is stated that your mother suffered
  • 65:24 - 65:26
    from hereditary feeble-mindedness.
  • 65:26 - 65:27
    That is not…
  • 65:27 - 65:30
    That is not true! Not true! Not true!
  • 65:32 - 65:35
    Can you give us
    some clarification as to how
  • 65:35 - 65:37
    the hereditary health court in Stuttgart
  • 65:37 - 65:38
    arrived at that decision?
  • 65:39 - 65:42
    It was just something they said
  • 65:42 - 65:44
    to put me on the operating table.
  • 65:44 - 65:45
    It was just something they said?
  • 65:45 - 65:46
    Yes!
  • 65:47 - 65:51
    Mr. Petersen, there was a simple test
  • 65:53 - 65:57
    that the health court used to ask
    in all cases of mental incompetence.
  • 65:57 - 66:00
    Since you say they did not ask you then,
  • 66:00 - 66:03
    perhaps you can answer it for us now.
  • 66:03 - 66:05
    Form a sentence out of the words
  • 66:05 - 66:07
    "hare," "hunter," "field."
  • 66:07 - 66:09
    Your Honor, objection.
  • 66:14 - 66:16
    Mr. Petersen…
  • 66:18 - 66:22
    Was the court in Stuttgart
    constituted like this one?
  • 66:23 - 66:26
    I don't understand what…
  • 66:26 - 66:28
    Was there an audience?
  • 66:29 - 66:31
    An audience? Yes, yes.
  • 66:32 - 66:34
    Thank you.
  • 66:37 - 66:39
    Objection overruled.
  • 66:41 - 66:45
    "Hare," "hunter," "field."
  • 66:46 - 66:47
    Mr. Petersen…
  • 66:49 - 66:51
    Take your time.
  • 66:53 - 66:55
    "Hare," "hunter," "field."
  • 66:58 - 67:02
    "Hare," "hunter."
  • 67:05 - 67:08
    They had already made up…
  • 67:09 - 67:12
    When I walked into the court,
    they had made up their minds.
  • 67:12 - 67:15
    They had made up their minds!
  • 67:16 - 67:19
    They put me in the
    hospital, like a criminal.
  • 67:19 - 67:23
    I could not say anything.
    I could not do anything. I…
  • 67:25 - 67:27
    I had to lay there.
  • 67:30 - 67:32
    My… My mother,
  • 67:34 - 67:36
    what you say about her…
  • 67:36 - 67:40
    She was a woman,
    a servant woman who worked hard.
  • 67:40 - 67:42
    She was a hardworking woman,
  • 67:42 - 67:46
    and it is not fair, not fair what you say.
  • 67:52 - 67:53
    Ah, here.
  • 67:55 - 67:59
    I want to show you.
    I have here her… Her picture.
  • 68:00 - 68:02
    I would like you to look at it.
  • 68:14 - 68:16
    I would like you to judge.
  • 68:18 - 68:22
    I want that you tell me
  • 68:23 - 68:25
    was she feeble-minded?
  • 68:27 - 68:28
    My mother!
  • 68:30 - 68:32
    Was she feeble-minded?
  • 68:35 - 68:37
    Was she?
  • 68:47 - 68:50
    I feel it is my duty
    to point out to the tribunal
  • 68:51 - 68:54
    that the witness
    is not in control of his mental processes.
  • 68:55 - 68:59
    I know I am not. Since that day.
  • 69:01 - 69:04
    I've been half I've ever been.
  • 69:12 - 69:15
    The tribunal does not know
    how you were before.
  • 69:16 - 69:18
    It can never know.
  • 69:19 - 69:21
    It has only your word.
  • 69:43 - 69:44
    Court is adjourned.
  • 69:57 - 70:00
    That's one problem we have
    with the prosecution.
  • 70:00 - 70:02
    It's filled with young
    radicals like Lawson.
  • 70:03 - 70:05
    Is that what Lawson is? A young radical?
  • 70:05 - 70:08
    Well, he was a personal protégé of F.D.R.
  • 70:09 - 70:10
    Well, F.D.R. had a few friends
  • 70:10 - 70:12
    who weren't radicals, didn't he?
  • 70:12 - 70:13
    Name one.
  • 70:14 - 70:15
    Well, Wendell Wilkie.
  • 70:15 - 70:17
    Wilkie.
  • 70:17 - 70:20
    Is he your idea of a conservative?
  • 70:20 - 70:22
    As a matter of fact, Dan,
  • 70:22 - 70:25
    I've been wondering how you stand.
  • 70:25 - 70:27
    Well, I'll clarify that for you, Curtiss.
  • 70:27 - 70:29
    I'm a rock-ribbed Republican
  • 70:29 - 70:32
    who thought
    that Franklin Roosevelt was a great man.
  • 70:33 - 70:34
    Oh, one of those?
  • 70:38 - 70:39
    Max!
  • 70:40 - 70:42
    Max Perkins. You know him?
  • 70:42 - 70:43
    No, I don't think so.
  • 70:43 - 70:45
    He's with the United Press.
  • 70:49 - 70:51
    Max, what are you doing here?
  • 70:51 - 70:53
    I thought you might
    kick up a row or something.
  • 70:53 - 70:56
    I haven't had that much to drink.
  • 70:56 - 70:57
    Oh, I'm sorry, this is Judge Ives.
  • 70:57 - 70:59
    -Hello.
    -Mrs. Ives.
  • 70:59 - 71:01
    -How do you do?
    -How do you do?
  • 71:01 - 71:02
    Judge Haywood, Mrs. Bertholt.
  • 71:02 - 71:03
    We have met.
  • 71:04 - 71:05
    Yes, we have.
  • 71:05 - 71:07
    Won't you join us for a drink?
  • 71:07 - 71:09
    We would like to very much.
  • 71:09 - 71:11
    - Max, will you sit here?
    - Thank you.
  • 71:12 - 71:16
    Incidentally, Max, I admired your article
    on Mrs. Bertholt very much.
  • 71:16 - 71:20
    It was straight reporting. Her defense
    of her husband was quite eloquent.
  • 71:20 - 71:23
    Are you going to do a story
    on these trials?
  • 71:23 - 71:25
    I'll tell you something frankly, Judge.
  • 71:25 - 71:29
    At the moment, I couldn't give a story
    away on the Nuremberg trials.
  • 71:29 - 71:31
    What do you mean, Mr. Perkins?
  • 71:31 - 71:33
    The American public
    just isn't interested anymore.
  • 71:34 - 71:36
    But the war's only been over two years,
    Mr. Perkins.
  • 71:37 - 71:38
    That's right.
  • 71:38 - 71:40
    May I take your order, please?
  • 71:40 - 71:41
    Yes. See what the ladies will have.
  • 71:42 - 71:43
    How about some more beer, Dan?
  • 71:43 - 71:45
    No, no, no.
    I think I've had my fill of beer.
  • 71:45 - 71:47
    I'd like to try something else, if I may.
  • 71:47 - 71:49
    Why don't you try some Sonnenberg,
  • 71:49 - 71:52
    or Schwalbenwinkel? It's the local wine.
  • 71:52 - 71:55
    Sonnenberg or… Schwalbenwinkel.
  • 71:55 - 71:57
    Yes, I think I'd like that.
  • 71:57 - 71:59
    Some Schweissenwinkel.
  • 71:59 - 72:00
    Will you have some?
  • 72:00 - 72:02
    Yes, thank you. I'll have the same.
  • 72:02 - 72:03
    Should we stay with the beer, Max?
  • 72:03 - 72:04
    Fine.
  • 72:04 - 72:06
    Thank you, thank you.
  • 72:06 - 72:08
    You got home all right the other night?
  • 72:08 - 72:10
    Oh, yes, thank you.
  • 72:10 - 72:13
    I don't know
    what I would have done without the car.
  • 72:14 - 72:16
    You speak, uh, English very well,
    Mrs. Bertholt.
  • 72:16 - 72:18
    Thank you.
  • 72:18 - 72:20
    My husband and I
    spent three years in America.
  • 72:24 - 72:27
    I hope you had a chance
    to see something of Nuremberg.
  • 72:27 - 72:28
    Well.
  • 72:28 - 72:30
    Well, I'm afraid mainly the…
  • 72:30 - 72:33
    The road between my house
    and the Palace of Justice.
  • 72:33 - 72:36
    Uh, and then some places
    that have to do with the case,
  • 72:36 - 72:38
    the historical aspects.
  • 72:38 - 72:40
    The Nazi aspects.
  • 72:40 - 72:43
    You should see some
    of the other parts of Nuremberg.
  • 72:43 - 72:46
    There are many beautiful things to see
    in the old part of town.
  • 72:46 - 72:48
    Museums we're trying to rebuild.
  • 72:49 - 72:51
    And there's a concert, a piano concert,
  • 72:51 - 72:53
    next week at the old opera house.
  • 72:53 - 72:54
    Arthur Reiss.
  • 72:55 - 72:57
    He was a refugee from Hitler
    in the early days.
  • 72:58 - 73:00
    We've persuaded him to come back.
  • 73:00 - 73:01
    It ought to be quite an evening.
  • 73:02 - 73:03
    Would you like to come?
  • 73:04 - 73:05
    Yes, I would.
  • 73:06 - 73:08
    I'll tell them to leave a ticket for you
    at the box office.
  • 73:08 - 73:10
    I'm on the committee.
  • 73:10 - 73:11
    Thank you very much, Mrs. Bertholt.
  • 73:12 - 73:13
    Oh, it's nothing.
  • 73:13 - 73:15
    You see, I have a mission
    with the Americans,
  • 73:15 - 73:17
    as Mr. Perkins can tell you.
  • 73:17 - 73:19
    Oh, what is that?
  • 73:19 - 73:22
    To convince you that
    we're not all monsters.
  • 73:26 - 73:28
    -Good evening, Colonel.
    -Good evening.
  • 73:28 - 73:29
    Colonel. Major Radnitz.
  • 73:30 - 73:32
    Good evening, Mrs. Bertholt.
  • 73:36 - 73:37
    I hope you'll excuse me.
  • 73:37 - 73:39
    But you've just come, Mrs…
  • 73:39 - 73:40
    No, I must go. Please excuse me.
  • 73:40 - 73:42
    It was awfully nice meeting you.
  • 73:42 - 73:44
    If you really want to hear the concert,
  • 73:44 - 73:46
    there'll be a ticket for
    you at the box office.
  • 73:46 - 73:47
    -Thank you.
    -Good night.
  • 73:47 - 73:49
    Good night.
  • 73:50 - 73:51
    Good night, Mrs. Bertholt. Max.
  • 73:56 - 74:01
    Mrs. Bertholt doesn't hold
    a burning passion for me.
  • 74:02 - 74:04
    I prosecuted her husband.
  • 74:06 - 74:08
    There are many people
    who think a death sentence
  • 74:09 - 74:11
    would not have been passed
    against General Bertholt today.
  • 74:12 - 74:13
    Oh, I'm sure there are.
  • 74:14 - 74:16
    I'm… I'm sure there are people who think
  • 74:16 - 74:19
    all the prisoners in Nuremberg
    should be free today.
  • 74:20 - 74:22
    All of them. Let… Let…
  • 74:23 - 74:24
    Excuse me.
  • 74:24 - 74:26
    I've had, uh…
  • 74:27 - 74:29
    I've had one or two too many
  • 74:29 - 74:32
    as might be painfully obvious
    to you gentlemen.
  • 74:32 - 74:34
    The spectacle this afternoon
  • 74:34 - 74:37
    with Mr. Petersen put me off my feed.
    I'm sorry.
  • 74:37 - 74:41
    Three beers and Schwalbenwinkel, please.
  • 74:48 - 74:50
    Schwalbenwinkel.
  • 74:51 - 74:53
    Yeah, it's good beer.
  • 74:53 - 74:55
    They make it good in this country.
  • 74:55 - 74:56
    Mmm.
  • 74:56 - 74:57
    You know…
  • 74:58 - 75:01
    You know, there's, uh,
    there's one thing about Americans.
  • 75:02 - 75:05
    We're not cut out to be occupiers.
  • 75:05 - 75:08
    We're new at it.
    We're not very good at it.
  • 75:08 - 75:11
    We… We… We come over here,
    and what do we see?
  • 75:12 - 75:14
    We see this beautiful country.
  • 75:14 - 75:17
    It is beautiful. It's very beautiful.
  • 75:17 - 75:21
    We see the culture
    that goes back for hundreds of years.
  • 75:21 - 75:23
    We see its gemütlich charm,
  • 75:24 - 75:27
    and the charm of people like,
    uh, Mrs. Bertholt.
  • 75:29 - 75:32
    We… We've got a built-in
    inferiority complex.
  • 75:32 - 75:34
    We forgive and forget easy.
  • 75:34 - 75:37
    We give the other guy
    the benefit of the doubt.
  • 75:37 - 75:39
    That's the American way.
  • 75:41 - 75:43
    We beat the greatest war machine
  • 75:43 - 75:45
    since Alexander the Great.
  • 75:46 - 75:48
    And now the boy scouts take over.
  • 75:50 - 75:51
    The trouble with you, Colonel,
  • 75:51 - 75:53
    is you'd like to indict the whole country.
  • 75:53 - 75:57
    Now that might be
    emotionally satisfying to you,
  • 75:57 - 76:00
    but it wouldn't be exactly practical,
    and hardly fair.
  • 76:01 - 76:03
    Hardly fair?
  • 76:06 - 76:07
    "Hare."
  • 76:08 - 76:09
    "Hunter."
  • 76:11 - 76:12
    "Field."
  • 76:14 - 76:16
    That's right, let's be fair.
  • 76:17 - 76:20
    "The hare was shot
    by the hunter in the field."
  • 76:21 - 76:22
    It's really quite simple.
  • 76:24 - 76:25
    Uh,
  • 76:26 - 76:29
    Colonel, I think we ought to be going.
  • 76:29 - 76:32
    Yes, we really shouldn't
    be discussing this.
  • 76:32 - 76:34
    Oh, no, no, Judge.
  • 76:34 - 76:36
    We're fair Americans, and true-blue.
  • 76:36 - 76:38
    We mustn't do anything
    that's out of order.
  • 76:38 - 76:41
    No, sir. We can't do anything
    that's out of order.
  • 76:45 - 76:47
    There are no Nazis in Germany.
  • 76:47 - 76:49
    Didn't you know that, Judge?
  • 76:49 - 76:52
    The Eskimos invaded Germany
    and took over.
  • 76:52 - 76:55
    That's how all those
    terrible things happened.
  • 76:55 - 76:57
    It wasn't the fault of the Germans.
  • 76:57 - 77:00
    It was the fault of those damn Eskimos.
  • 77:02 - 77:05
    Excuse me. Excuse me.
  • 77:05 - 77:06
    Good night, Colonel.
  • 77:06 - 77:08
    Good night.
  • 77:22 - 77:24
    Can I have your attention, please?
  • 77:24 - 77:26
    I'm sorry to interrupt your dancing.
  • 77:26 - 77:29
    The following officers
    are requested to report to their units.
  • 77:29 - 77:35
    Major McCarthy, Major Citron,
    Major Cantor, Captain Byers,
  • 77:35 - 77:39
    Captain Connell,
    Captain Douglas, Captain Wolfe,
  • 77:39 - 77:41
    Major Booth, and Major Rice.
  • 77:42 - 77:45
    Thank you. You can continue dancing.
  • 77:48 - 77:49
    Harry, what is it?
  • 77:50 - 77:52
    The Russians have made their move
    in Czechoslovakia.
  • 77:52 - 77:54
    It's rumored Masaryk committed suicide.
  • 77:54 - 77:56
    We're sending some units up there.
  • 77:56 - 77:58
    What do you think's gonna happen?
  • 77:58 - 78:00
    I don't know.
  • 78:03 - 78:05
    Uh, Judge Haywood…
  • 78:07 - 78:08
    Elsa Scheffler.
  • 78:17 - 78:19
    "President Truman responded to the crisis
  • 78:19 - 78:22
    "by calling for an extension
    of military training.
  • 78:22 - 78:25
    "He stated that he is deeply concerned
  • 78:25 - 78:27
    "with the survival of the Western nations
  • 78:27 - 78:30
    "in face of the threat from the east."
  • 78:30 - 78:32
    "Threat from the east."
  • 78:32 - 78:34
    Herr Janning, did you hear this?
  • 78:34 - 78:36
    Herr Janning, did you hear
    what's in the paper?
  • 78:36 - 78:38
    Exactly what Hitler said.
  • 78:38 - 78:41
    "The clash for survival
    between east and west."
  • 78:41 - 78:42
    He knew, he knew!
  • 78:43 - 78:47
    They'll see that we knew
    exactly what we were doing all the time.
  • 78:47 - 78:48
    They cannot call us criminals,
  • 78:49 - 78:51
    and at the same time ask us to help them.
  • 78:51 - 78:53
    We must stand together now.
  • 78:53 - 78:56
    The most crucial part of this case
    is coming up.
  • 78:56 - 78:59
    We have fallen on happy times, Herr Hahn.
  • 78:59 - 79:02
    In the old times
    it would have made your day
  • 79:02 - 79:04
    if I'd deigned to say good morning to you.
  • 79:04 - 79:07
    Now that we are here
    in this place together,
  • 79:07 - 79:10
    you feel obliged to tell me
    what to do with my life.
  • 79:10 - 79:12
    Herr Janning, you must stand with us.
  • 79:12 - 79:15
    It is not good for Germans
    to turn on one another.
  • 79:15 - 79:17
    We have a common ground now.
  • 79:18 - 79:20
    Listen to me, Herr Hahn.
  • 79:20 - 79:22
    There have been terrible things
  • 79:22 - 79:23
    that have happened to me in my life.
  • 79:24 - 79:26
    But the worst thing that has ever happened
  • 79:26 - 79:29
    is to find myself
    in the company of men like you.
  • 79:29 - 79:32
    I have nothing in common
    with you and party hacks like you.
  • 79:32 - 79:33
    You have something in common.
  • 79:33 - 79:35
    You were part of that same regime.
  • 79:35 - 79:38
    You stood by that regime,
    the same as the rest of us.
  • 79:38 - 79:41
    And there's something else
    you have in common.
  • 79:41 - 79:43
    You are a German.
  • 81:16 - 81:18
    Good evening. Did you like it?
  • 81:18 - 81:21
    Oh, yes, I did, I did. Very much indeed.
  • 81:21 - 81:22
    Can I drop you?
  • 81:22 - 81:24
    I only live a few blocks from here.
  • 81:24 - 81:25
    I was going to walk.
  • 81:26 - 81:27
    Would you like to go for a walk?
  • 81:28 - 81:29
    Yes, yes, I would.
  • 81:29 - 81:31
    I won't need the car now.
    I'll walk with Mrs. Bertholt.
  • 81:31 - 81:33
    You want me to wait for you, Your Honor?
  • 81:33 - 81:34
    No, no, that won't be necessary.
  • 81:34 - 81:37
    I'll wait for you, Your Honor.
  • 82:13 - 82:16
    The German people love to sing,
    no matter what the situation.
  • 82:16 - 82:18
    I've noticed that.
  • 82:19 - 82:22
    Do American people sing in bars, too?
  • 82:22 - 82:24
    I have forgotten.
  • 82:24 - 82:27
    No. We're apt to be pretty sullen in bars.
  • 82:39 - 82:41
    I wish you understood German.
  • 82:42 - 82:45
    The words are very beautiful.
  • 82:45 - 82:46
    Very sad.
  • 82:47 - 82:49
    Much sadder than the… The English words.
  • 82:50 - 82:54
    The German soldier knows
    he's going to lose his girl
  • 82:55 - 82:56
    and his life.
  • 82:59 - 83:01
    The lantern burns every night.
  • 83:01 - 83:03
    It knows the steps
  • 83:04 - 83:06
    and the way you walk.
  • 83:07 - 83:11
    It burns every night,
    but I've been long forgotten.
  • 83:12 - 83:14
    Should harm come to me…
  • 83:15 - 83:17
    Who will stand with you
  • 83:18 - 83:20
    under the lantern?
  • 83:21 - 83:24
    With you, Lili Marleen.
  • 83:32 - 83:35
    What is your life like in America?
  • 83:35 - 83:37
    Do you have a family?
  • 83:37 - 83:40
    Yes, I have a daughter,
    and she has four children.
  • 83:40 - 83:44
    Four? You must be very proud of them.
  • 83:44 - 83:45
    Yes, I am. I admit it.
  • 83:47 - 83:48
    And where's your wife?
  • 83:48 - 83:50
    She died a few years ago.
  • 83:51 - 83:52
    Cigarettes?
  • 83:54 - 83:56
    How about you? Do you have children?
  • 83:56 - 83:57
    No, I don't.
  • 83:59 - 84:00
    What is your position in America?
  • 84:01 - 84:02
    It must be important.
  • 84:02 - 84:06
    No, it isn't, really.
    I'm a District Court judge.
  • 84:06 - 84:09
    I haven't even been
    that for the last year.
  • 84:09 - 84:10
    Are you retired?
  • 84:10 - 84:13
    Forcibly, by the electorate.
  • 84:13 - 84:16
    You elect judges in the United States?
  • 84:16 - 84:18
    Yes, in some states.
  • 84:18 - 84:20
    I didn't know that.
  • 84:20 - 84:22
    Well, it's either one of the virtues
  • 84:22 - 84:24
    or one of the defects
    of our judiciary system.
  • 84:24 - 84:26
    I thought it was
    one of the virtues until last year,
  • 84:26 - 84:28
    when I was defeated.
  • 84:28 - 84:32
    I'm sure it was the fault
    of the electorate, not yours.
  • 84:32 - 84:34
    Seems to be some difference
    of opinion about that.
  • 84:38 - 84:40
    This is where I live.
  • 84:40 - 84:42
    Here?
  • 84:42 - 84:44
    Yes. It's not so bad inside.
  • 84:44 - 84:45
    Would you like to come up?
  • 84:45 - 84:46
    I could make some coffee.
  • 84:46 - 84:48
    Yes, thank you.
  • 85:06 - 85:09
    Things haven't been
    very easy for you, have they?
  • 85:09 - 85:11
    I'm not used to them being easy.
  • 85:11 - 85:14
    I'm not fragile, Judge Haywood.
  • 85:14 - 85:16
    I'm a daughter of the military.
  • 85:17 - 85:19
    You know what that means, don't you?
  • 85:19 - 85:21
    No, I'm afraid I don't.
  • 85:22 - 85:24
    It means I was taught discipline.
  • 85:25 - 85:27
    A very special kind of discipline.
  • 85:27 - 85:28
    For instance, when I was a child,
  • 85:29 - 85:32
    we used to go for long rides
    into the country in summertime.
  • 85:32 - 85:33
    But I was never allowed to run
  • 85:33 - 85:36
    to the lemonade stand with the others.
  • 85:36 - 85:39
    I was told, "Control your thirst.
  • 85:41 - 85:43
    "Control hunger.
  • 85:44 - 85:45
    "Control emotion."
  • 85:46 - 85:48
    It has served me well.
  • 85:49 - 85:50
    And your husband?
  • 85:50 - 85:53
    Was he of that heritage, too?
  • 85:53 - 85:55
    My husband was a soldier.
  • 85:55 - 85:57
    He was brought up to do one thing,
  • 85:57 - 86:00
    to fight in the battle, and fight well.
  • 86:03 - 86:04
    Is the coffee all right?
  • 86:04 - 86:06
    Fine, thank you.
  • 86:06 - 86:08
    It's ersatz, but I always try
    to make it strong.
  • 86:08 - 86:10
    It's fine.
  • 86:16 - 86:17
    I'm curious.
  • 86:19 - 86:21
    What do you think of Ernst Janning?
  • 86:23 - 86:25
    Mrs. Bertholt, I…
  • 86:25 - 86:29
    I really am not at liberty to discuss
    the case outside of the courtroom.
  • 86:29 - 86:31
    Oh, yes, of course.
  • 86:36 - 86:38
    I knew Ernst Janning a little.
  • 86:38 - 86:41
    We used to attend the same concerts.
  • 86:41 - 86:43
    I remember there was a reception given
  • 86:43 - 86:45
    for Wagner's daughter-in-law.
  • 86:45 - 86:46
    Hitler was there.
  • 86:47 - 86:49
    Ernst Janning was there with his wife.
  • 86:50 - 86:52
    She was very beautiful,
  • 86:52 - 86:54
    very small, very delicate.
  • 86:55 - 86:57
    She's dead now.
  • 86:58 - 87:00
    Hitler was quite taken with her.
  • 87:00 - 87:03
    He made advances towards her
    during the reception.
  • 87:03 - 87:07
    He used to do things like that
    in a burst of emotion.
  • 87:07 - 87:10
    I will never forget the way
    Ernst Janning cut him down.
  • 87:11 - 87:14
    I don't think anybody
    ever did it to him quite that way.
  • 87:14 - 87:16
    He said, "Chancellor,
  • 87:16 - 87:20
    "I do not object so much
    that you are so ill-mannered.
  • 87:21 - 87:23
    "I do not object to that so much.
  • 87:24 - 87:27
    "I object that you are such a bourgeois."
  • 87:28 - 87:31
    Hitler whitened,
    stared at Janning, and walked out.
  • 87:36 - 87:38
    Is the coffee really all right?
  • 87:38 - 87:40
    Fine, thank you.
  • 87:43 - 87:45
    Men, like Janning,
  • 87:46 - 87:47
    my husband and I,
  • 87:47 - 87:49
    we hated Hitler. I want you to know that.
  • 87:50 - 87:52
    And he hated us.
  • 87:52 - 87:56
    He hated my husband
    because he was a real war hero,
  • 87:56 - 87:59
    and the little corporal
    couldn't tolerate that.
  • 87:59 - 88:03
    And he hated him because
    he married into nobility
  • 88:03 - 88:05
    which was my family.
  • 88:05 - 88:07
    Hitler was in awe of the nobility,
  • 88:07 - 88:09
    but he hated it.
  • 88:10 - 88:14
    That's why it's so ironic, what happened.
  • 88:18 - 88:21
    You know what happened
    to my husband, don't you?
  • 88:21 - 88:22
    Yes.
  • 88:22 - 88:26
    What did he know of the crimes
    they cited him for?
  • 88:27 - 88:30
    He was placed on trial
    with the other military leaders.
  • 88:31 - 88:32
    It was part of their revenge.
  • 88:32 - 88:35
    The victors always take on the vanquished.
  • 88:36 - 88:38
    It was political murder.
  • 88:39 - 88:42
    You can see that, can't you?
  • 88:43 - 88:46
    Mrs. Bertholt, I don't know what I see.
  • 88:47 - 88:49
    I probably shouldn't be here
  • 88:49 - 88:52
    talking with you about this at all.
  • 88:53 - 88:54
    But I want to understand.
  • 88:54 - 88:56
    I do want to understand.
  • 88:58 - 88:59
    I have to.
  • 89:13 - 89:15
    Would you like some more coffee?
  • 89:16 - 89:17
    Yes, thank you.
  • 89:27 - 89:28
    Hi.
  • 89:28 - 89:29
    Hi.
  • 89:33 - 89:34
    We found Irene Hoffman.
  • 89:36 - 89:37
    Where?
  • 89:37 - 89:39
    Berlin.
  • 89:39 - 89:40
    Berlin, huh?
  • 89:40 - 89:43
    She got married. Her name is Wallner now.
  • 89:43 - 89:45
    That's why we had difficulty locating her.
  • 89:45 - 89:46
    When is she coming?
  • 89:47 - 89:48
    She's not coming.
  • 89:48 - 89:50
    What do you mean, she's not coming?
  • 89:50 - 89:52
    She doesn't want to come.
  • 89:52 - 89:54
    You know what it's like.
  • 89:54 - 89:56
    None of them want to testify anymore.
  • 89:57 - 89:59
    If I catch the midnight,
  • 89:59 - 90:01
    I could make it to Berlin,
  • 90:01 - 90:03
    and be back by tomorrow afternoon.
  • 90:03 - 90:04
    Tad, you haven't had any sleep…
  • 90:04 - 90:06
    It'll be worth it if I can get Hoffman.
  • 90:06 - 90:09
    Take over for me in court
    in the morning, will you?
  • 91:02 - 91:03
    Colonel, please!
  • 91:03 - 91:06
    I have told you this before,
    when you first came in.
  • 91:06 - 91:08
    I say it again now.
  • 91:08 - 91:10
    We are through with all this.
  • 91:10 - 91:14
    She does not have to go,
    you have no right to order her to go.
  • 91:14 - 91:16
    Mr. Wallner, I'm not ordering her to go.
  • 91:16 - 91:18
    I have no authority to order her to go.
  • 91:18 - 91:20
    Do you think we get a medal
  • 91:20 - 91:22
    for appearing at these trials?
  • 91:22 - 91:23
    The people do not like them.
  • 91:23 - 91:25
    They do not believe that Germans
  • 91:25 - 91:26
    should testify against other Germans.
  • 91:26 - 91:29
    Now, look, look, I…
    I haven't been prosecuting these cases
  • 91:29 - 91:32
    for the past two years
    without knowing that.
  • 91:40 - 91:42
    It is easy for you to say go.
  • 91:42 - 91:44
    After the trial
    you will go back to America,
  • 91:44 - 91:47
    but we must stay here
    and live with these people.
  • 91:47 - 91:50
    Mr. Wallner, don't you think
    I realize what I'm asking?
  • 91:50 - 91:53
    Then how can you come in like the gestapo,
    in the middle of the night…
  • 91:53 - 91:57
    Because they must not
    be allowed to get away with what they did.
  • 91:58 - 92:01
    You really think
    they won't get away with it in the end?
  • 92:04 - 92:07
    I say the hell with them,
    and the hell with you.
  • 92:07 - 92:08
    Hugo.
  • 92:19 - 92:21
    Emil Hahn will be there?
  • 92:23 - 92:25
    Yes. In the dock.
  • 92:28 - 92:30
    Ernst Janning?
  • 92:32 - 92:33
    Yes.
  • 92:43 - 92:45
    You saw the store downstairs.
  • 92:48 - 92:53
    It's not much,
    but it's a new start for us.
  • 92:55 - 92:58
    They will come if I go to Nuremberg.
  • 93:01 - 93:05
    They will come
    and break the windows of the store.
  • 93:05 - 93:08
    I'll place a guard in front of the store,
    24 hours a day.
  • 93:08 - 93:09
    You do not have to go, Irene.
  • 93:09 - 93:13
    -He has no right to ask you to go.
    -You do have to go.
  • 93:13 - 93:15
    You have to go, for all those people
  • 93:15 - 93:17
    who can't get up there
    on the stand themselves.
  • 93:17 - 93:19
    You do not owe it to anybody, Irene!
  • 93:19 - 93:22
    -Yes, you do!
    -You do not owe it to anybody.
  • 93:23 - 93:25
    You owe it…
  • 93:25 - 93:28
    You owe it to one person, at least.
  • 93:48 - 93:49
    In the night,
  • 93:50 - 93:52
    every night…
  • 93:54 - 93:57
    We've known somehow
    it would come to this.
  • 94:14 - 94:17
    Dr. Geuter,
    do you recognize that headline?
  • 94:17 - 94:18
    Yes, sir.
  • 94:19 - 94:21
    Would you read it to the tribunal?
  • 94:21 - 94:23
    "Death to the race defiler."
  • 94:24 - 94:25
    In what newspaper did it appear?
  • 94:26 - 94:28
    In Julius Stretcher's Der Stürmer.
  • 94:29 - 94:31
    What was it in connection with?
  • 94:32 - 94:34
    The Feldenstein case.
  • 94:34 - 94:36
    What was the Feldenstein case?
  • 94:37 - 94:41
    Your Honor, defense objects to the
    introduction of the Feldenstein case.
  • 94:41 - 94:45
    It is a notorious case,
    perhaps the most notorious of the period.
  • 94:45 - 94:47
    It has overtones,
  • 94:48 - 94:52
    and appeals to emotion
    that would perhaps be best not raised.
  • 94:53 - 94:57
    There are no issues or overtones
    that may not be raised in this courtroom.
  • 94:57 - 95:00
    The tribunal is interested
    in everything that is relevant.
  • 95:00 - 95:02
    Objection is overruled.
  • 95:07 - 95:09
    It's all right. I'll take it.
  • 95:12 - 95:14
    May it please the tribunal?
  • 95:14 - 95:17
    -You may continue.
    -Thank you.
  • 95:26 - 95:27
    Now.
  • 95:28 - 95:30
    What was the Feldenstein case?
  • 95:31 - 95:35
    The case of a man
    accused of racial pollution.
  • 95:35 - 95:39
    Will you explain what is meant
    by "racial pollution"?
  • 95:40 - 95:44
    This is the, uh, charge that is referred
    to in the, uh, Nuremberg laws.
  • 95:45 - 95:47
    It says that any non-Aryan
  • 95:48 - 95:52
    having sexual relations with an Aryan
    may be punished by death.
  • 95:52 - 95:56
    When did you first become
    acquainted with the Feldenstein case?
  • 95:57 - 96:02
    In, uh, September 1935,
    I was contacted by the police.
  • 96:02 - 96:05
    They said that Mr. Feldenstein
    was being held
  • 96:05 - 96:09
    and, uh, that he requested
    that I serve as his counselor.
  • 96:10 - 96:12
    What position did he hold
    in the community?
  • 96:12 - 96:15
    He was a very well-known merchant.
  • 96:15 - 96:19
    He was one of the heads
    of the Jewish congregation in Nuremberg.
  • 96:20 - 96:23
    What was the nature
    of the charge against him?
  • 96:24 - 96:27
    He was accused
    of having intimate relations
  • 96:28 - 96:31
    with a 16-year-old girl, Irene Hoffman.
  • 96:32 - 96:34
    I see.
  • 96:37 - 96:39
    And, uh, what did he say
    to you about the case?
  • 96:39 - 96:41
    He said it was false.
  • 96:41 - 96:44
    He said he knew the girl
    and her family a long time.
  • 96:44 - 96:46
    He'd gone to visit her since they died.
  • 96:47 - 96:50
    But there had never been anything
    of the kind charged between them.
  • 96:52 - 96:57
    Now, Doctor, would you please tell
    the tribunal what happened then?
  • 96:59 - 97:02
    He was indicted before the special court
    at Nuremberg.
  • 97:02 - 97:05
    And where was this special court?
  • 97:05 - 97:07
    It was right here, this building.
  • 97:08 - 97:10
    This very courtroom.
  • 97:10 - 97:11
    Dr. Geuter,
  • 97:13 - 97:15
    what were the circumstances
    surrounding the trial?
  • 97:18 - 97:22
    It was used as a show place
    for national socialism.
  • 97:24 - 97:28
    It was the time
    of the September celebrations,
  • 97:28 - 97:30
    the Nuremberg rallies.
  • 97:31 - 97:33
    The courtroom was crowded.
  • 97:33 - 97:36
    Back there, people were standing up.
  • 97:37 - 97:41
    Julius Stretcher was sitting
    in one of the front seats.
  • 97:42 - 97:45
    And high officials
    of the Nazi Party were all over.
  • 97:46 - 97:50
    Doctor, would you please tell us
  • 97:50 - 97:54
    what were your expectations
    for the trial in this climate?
  • 97:55 - 97:56
    I expected the worst
  • 97:57 - 98:02
    when I saw that Emil Hahn was
    the public prosecutor.
  • 98:03 - 98:05
    He was a fanatic.
  • 98:05 - 98:09
    His trials were always marked
    by extreme brutality.
  • 98:13 - 98:18
    But I had one hope for the outcome…
  • 98:21 - 98:26
    Because sitting on the judge's bench
    was Ernst Janning.
  • 98:27 - 98:31
    His reputation
    was known throughout Germany.
  • 98:31 - 98:36
    He was known to have
    dedicated his life to justice.
  • 98:37 - 98:39
    To the concept of justice.
  • 98:42 - 98:44
    Thank you. That's all.
  • 98:47 - 98:49
    Any questions?
  • 98:50 - 98:52
    Thank you. No questions.
  • 98:53 - 98:55
    The witness is excused.
  • 98:56 - 99:02
    The prosecution calls to the stand
    Irene Hoffman Wallner.
  • 99:26 - 99:28
    Will you raise your right hand?
  • 99:29 - 99:31
    I swear by God,
    the Almighty and Omniscient,
  • 99:31 - 99:34
    that I will speak the pure truth,
    and will withhold and add nothing.
  • 99:34 - 99:35
    I do.
  • 99:40 - 99:43
    Will you please, uh, state
    your name to the tribunal?
  • 99:46 - 99:49
    Irene Hoffman Wallner.
  • 99:49 - 99:51
    Mrs. Wallner,
  • 99:52 - 99:55
    did you know Lehman Feldenstein?
  • 99:55 - 99:57
    Yes.
  • 99:57 - 99:59
    When did you first meet him?
  • 100:00 - 100:03
    It was 1925 or 1926.
  • 100:04 - 100:06
    I am not sure exactly.
  • 100:07 - 100:08
    How old was he at this time?
  • 100:09 - 100:10
    He was in his 50s.
  • 100:11 - 100:14
    And how old was he
    at the time of his arrest?
  • 100:16 - 100:20
    -He was 65.
    -I see.
  • 100:21 - 100:24
    What was the nature of your relationship?
  • 100:26 - 100:27
    We were friends.
  • 100:29 - 100:32
    Did you continue to see him
    after your parents died?
  • 100:32 - 100:34
    -Yes.
    -Why?
  • 100:36 - 100:38
    We were friends. He…
  • 100:39 - 100:42
    He owned the building that I lived in.
  • 100:43 - 100:46
    His business took him there quite often.
  • 100:47 - 100:50
    Now what did you say to the police
  • 100:51 - 100:55
    when they, uh, questioned you
    about having intimate relations with him?
  • 100:57 - 101:00
    I told them it was a lie.
  • 101:00 - 101:03
    Could you tell me who
    the public prosecutor was?
  • 101:07 - 101:08
    Emil Hahn.
  • 101:10 - 101:12
    Did Emil Hahn question you?
  • 101:13 - 101:14
    Yes.
  • 101:15 - 101:17
    What did he say to you?
  • 101:19 - 101:22
    He took me into a separate room,
  • 101:24 - 101:25
    where we were alone.
  • 101:27 - 101:32
    He told me that it was no use
    to repeat my story
  • 101:33 - 101:36
    because no one would believe me.
  • 101:37 - 101:40
    There had been a race defilement
  • 101:41 - 101:46
    and the only pardon for this was
    to kill the violator.
  • 101:47 - 101:53
    He… He told me that if I protected
  • 101:53 - 101:55
    Mr. Feldenstein,
  • 101:56 - 102:00
    that I would be held
    under arrest for perjury.
  • 102:01 - 102:03
    What did you reply to him?
  • 102:03 - 102:08
    I… I told him what I had
    said again and again.
  • 102:08 - 102:12
    I told him that I could
    not say anything else.
  • 102:12 - 102:17
    I could not lie about someone
    who had been so kind to me.
  • 102:18 - 102:20
    Were you held under arrest?
  • 102:21 - 102:22
    Yes.
  • 102:24 - 102:26
    Now, Mrs. Wallner, tell us
  • 102:27 - 102:30
    what was the…the manner
  • 102:31 - 102:34
    in which Emil Hahn
    conducted the prosecution?
  • 102:35 - 102:40
    He… He made a mockery
  • 102:41 - 102:45
    of everything Mr. Feldenstein tried to say
    in his own defense.
  • 102:47 - 102:52
    He held him up to ridicule
    whenever possible.
  • 102:53 - 102:55
    What was the reaction of the audience?
  • 102:56 - 102:58
    They laughed.
  • 102:58 - 103:01
    Again and again.
  • 103:02 - 103:04
    How long did the trial last?
  • 103:07 - 103:08
    Mrs. Wallner…
  • 103:10 - 103:12
    How long did the trial last?
  • 103:15 - 103:16
    Two days.
  • 103:16 - 103:19
    Was the verdict passed
    at the end of the second day?
  • 103:20 - 103:21
    Yes.
  • 103:21 - 103:24
    -What was the verdict?
    -Guilty.
  • 103:25 - 103:27
    And what was the sentence?
  • 103:29 - 103:32
    Mr. Feldenstein was sentenced
  • 103:33 - 103:34
    to be executed.
  • 103:36 - 103:40
    I was sentenced to be imprisoned
    for two years, for perjury.
  • 103:43 - 103:46
    Who was the presiding judge?
  • 103:48 - 103:50
    Ernst Janning.
  • 103:51 - 103:54
    Were the sentences carried out?
  • 103:56 - 103:57
    Mmm.
  • 104:00 - 104:03
    Thank you very much,
    Mrs. Wallner. That's all.
  • 104:09 - 104:10
    Any questions?
  • 104:23 - 104:26
    Your Honor, I would like
    to request that the witness
  • 104:27 - 104:28
    be kept available.
  • 104:29 - 104:33
    We will present further evidence
    on the Feldenstein matter
  • 104:33 - 104:36
    when it comes time
    for the defense to present its case.
  • 104:39 - 104:42
    The witness will
    please hold herself so available.
  • 104:44 - 104:46
    You may go. You're excused now.
  • 105:08 - 105:10
    Colonel Lawson?
  • 105:15 - 105:17
    Your Honors,
  • 105:17 - 105:20
    I offer in evidence a decree
    signed by Adolf Hitler
  • 105:21 - 105:25
    directing that all persons accused
    or suspected of disloyalty
  • 105:25 - 105:29
    or resistance of any sort,
    might be arrested secretly
  • 105:29 - 105:34
    with no notice to friends or relatives,
    without any trial whatsoever,
  • 105:34 - 105:36
    and put into concentration camps.
  • 105:37 - 105:41
    I also offer a group of orders
    issued under that decree,
  • 105:42 - 105:45
    each one signed by one of the defendants,
  • 105:46 - 105:50
    by which hundreds of persons were arrested
    and placed in concentration camps.
  • 105:51 - 105:53
    Signed by Fried rich Hoffstetter,
  • 105:54 - 105:56
    Werner Lammpe,
  • 105:57 - 105:59
    Emil Hahn,
  • 106:00 - 106:02
    Ernst Janning.
  • 106:05 - 106:06
    Your Honors,
  • 106:07 - 106:10
    the defendants on trial here today
  • 106:10 - 106:14
    did not personally administer
    the concentration camps.
  • 106:15 - 106:17
    They never had to beat victims
  • 106:18 - 106:21
    or pull the lever
    that released gas into the chambers.
  • 106:23 - 106:27
    But as the documents we've introduced
    into this case have shown,
  • 106:28 - 106:31
    these defendants fashioned
    and executed laws,
  • 106:32 - 106:34
    and rendered judgments…
  • 106:36 - 106:40
    Which sent millions of victims to their…
  • 106:40 - 106:41
    Destinations.
  • 106:41 - 106:43
    Major Radnitz?
  • 106:45 - 106:50
    Your Honors, I would like to request that
    Colonel Lawson be sworn in as a witness.
  • 106:50 - 106:52
    -Granted.
    -Thank you.
  • 106:58 - 106:59
    Will you raise your right hand?
  • 107:00 - 107:01
    I swear by God,
    the Almighty and Omniscient,
  • 107:02 - 107:04
    that I will speak the pure truth
    and withhold and add nothing.
  • 107:04 - 107:06
    I do.
  • 107:09 - 107:13
    Were you active in the United States Army
    in 1945 at the close of the war?
  • 107:13 - 107:15
    Yes, I was.
  • 107:15 - 107:19
    Were you in command
    of troops liberating concentration camps?
  • 107:19 - 107:20
    I was.
  • 107:21 - 107:24
    -Were you in Dachau and Belsen?
    -Yes.
  • 107:25 - 107:28
    Were you present when the films
    we are about to see were taken?
  • 107:28 - 107:30
    Yes, I was.
  • 107:58 - 107:59
    Okay.
  • 108:07 - 108:12
    The map shows the number of
    and location of concentration camps
  • 108:13 - 108:15
    under the Third Reich.
  • 108:17 - 108:22
    The Buchenwald concentration camp
    was founded in 1933.
  • 108:24 - 108:27
    Its inmates numbered about 80,000.
  • 108:30 - 108:32
    There was a motto at Buchenwald:
  • 108:33 - 108:34
    "Break the body…
  • 108:37 - 108:39
    "Break the spirit…
  • 108:42 - 108:43
    "Break the heart."
  • 108:46 - 108:48
    The ovens at Buchenwald.
  • 108:49 - 108:53
    Evidence of last-minute efforts
    to dispose of bodies.
  • 108:55 - 108:59
    The stoves were manufactured
    by a well-known company
  • 109:00 - 109:03
    which also specialized in baking ovens.
  • 109:05 - 109:07
    The name of the firm is clearly inscribed.
  • 109:08 - 109:11
    An exhibit of byproducts of Buchenwald
  • 109:13 - 109:16
    displayed for the local townspeople
    by an allied officer.
  • 109:18 - 109:20
    Brushes of every description.
  • 109:21 - 109:24
    Shoes, adults and children.
  • 109:25 - 109:27
    Spectacles.
  • 109:28 - 109:30
    Gold from teeth melted down,
  • 109:30 - 109:33
    sent once a month
    to the medical department
  • 109:33 - 109:35
    of the Waffen-S.S.
  • 109:35 - 109:39
    A lampshade made from human skin.
  • 109:41 - 109:43
    Skin being used for paintings,
  • 109:45 - 109:47
    many having an obscene nature.
  • 109:50 - 109:52
    The heads of two Polish laborers
  • 109:54 - 109:56
    shrunken to one-fifth their normal size.
  • 109:58 - 110:01
    A human pelvis used as an ashtray.
  • 110:05 - 110:11
    Children who'd been tattooed to mark them
    for eventual extermination.
  • 110:14 - 110:17
    Sometimes mercy was shown
    to the children.
  • 110:18 - 110:23
    They were injected with morphia
    so they'd be unconscious when hanged.
  • 110:25 - 110:26
    One of the doctors described
  • 110:26 - 110:29
    how they'd then place ropes
    around their necks,
  • 110:29 - 110:32
    and in the doctor's own words:
  • 110:32 - 110:38
    "Like pictures, they were then hanged
    by hooks on the walls."
  • 110:42 - 110:45
    The bodies of those
    who had come in boxcars
  • 110:46 - 110:48
    without food and without air,
  • 110:49 - 110:51
    who hadn't survived
    the journey to Dachau.
  • 110:53 - 110:56
    Hundreds of inmates were used
    as human guinea pigs
  • 110:57 - 111:00
    for atrocious medical experiments.
  • 111:02 - 111:07
    A witness at one of the executions
    at Dachau gave the following description:
  • 111:09 - 111:12
    "Inmates were made to leave
    their clothing on a rack.
  • 111:12 - 111:15
    "They were told
    they were going to take baths.
  • 111:16 - 111:19
    "Then the doors were locked.
  • 111:20 - 111:22
    "Tins of Zyklon B
  • 111:22 - 111:25
    "were released through
    the specially constructed apertures.
  • 111:27 - 111:31
    "You could hear the groaning
    and the whimpering inside.
  • 111:32 - 111:34
    "After two or three minutes,
  • 111:35 - 111:37
    "all was quiet."
  • 111:45 - 111:50
    Death transports that had arrived
    included 90,000 from Slovakia…
  • 111:53 - 111:55
    65,000 from Greece,
  • 111:57 - 111:58
    11,000 from France…
  • 112:01 - 112:03
    90,000 from Holland…
  • 112:06 - 112:08
    400,000 from Hungary…
  • 112:12 - 112:15
    250,000 from Poland and upper Silesia…
  • 112:17 - 112:20
    And 100,000 from Germany.
  • 112:24 - 112:26
    And this is what was filmed
  • 112:26 - 112:29
    when British troops liberated
    Belsen concentration camp.
  • 112:34 - 112:36
    For sanitary reasons,
  • 112:36 - 112:41
    a British bulldozer had to bury the bodies
    as quickly as possible.
  • 112:48 - 112:49
    Who were the bodies?
  • 112:51 - 112:55
    Members of every occupied country
    of Europe.
  • 112:56 - 112:59
    Two-thirds of the Jews of Europe…
  • 113:01 - 113:02
    Exterminated.
  • 113:04 - 113:06
    More than six million
  • 113:07 - 113:11
    according to reports
    from the Nazis' own figures.
  • 113:15 - 113:17
    But the real figure…
  • 113:22 - 113:24
    No one knows.
  • 113:31 - 113:35
    How dare they show us those films?
    How dare they?
  • 113:36 - 113:38
    We are not executioners. We are judges.
  • 113:40 - 113:42
    You do not think it was like that, do you?
  • 113:45 - 113:50
    There were executions, yes.
    But nothing like that. Nothing at all.
  • 113:56 - 113:57
    Pohl!
  • 113:58 - 114:00
    Pohl!
  • 114:02 - 114:05
    You ran those concentration camps.
  • 114:05 - 114:07
    You and Eichmann.
  • 114:08 - 114:10
    They say we killed millions of people.
  • 114:11 - 114:13
    Millions of people.
  • 114:13 - 114:15
    How could it be possible?
  • 114:16 - 114:20
    Tell them. How could it be possible?
  • 114:23 - 114:25
    It's possible.
  • 114:26 - 114:27
    How?
  • 114:28 - 114:30
    You mean, technically?
  • 114:32 - 114:35
    It all depends on your facilities.
  • 114:35 - 114:39
    Say you have two chambers
    that accommodate 2,000 people apiece.
  • 114:40 - 114:41
    Figure it out.
  • 114:42 - 114:45
    It's possible to get rid
    of 10,000 in a half-hour.
  • 114:47 - 114:49
    You don't even need guards to do it.
  • 114:50 - 114:52
    You can tell them
    they are going to take a shower,
  • 114:53 - 114:56
    and then instead of the water,
    you turn on the gas.
  • 114:58 - 115:00
    It's not the killing that is the problem.
  • 115:00 - 115:02
    It's disposing of the bodies.
  • 115:03 - 115:05
    That's the problem.
  • 115:56 - 115:58
    -I'm sorry I'm late.
    -That's all right.
  • 115:58 - 116:01
    I was doing some work
    for the rebuilding committee.
  • 116:03 - 116:05
    And I brought you some folders,
  • 116:05 - 116:08
    so we can decide
    what you should see next.
  • 116:08 - 116:11
    There's the Albrecht Dürer House,
    and the museum.
  • 116:11 - 116:13
    When do you think you could make it?
  • 116:13 - 116:15
    Oh, any time.
  • 116:15 - 116:17
    Would you like to order now?
  • 116:17 - 116:20
    What would you like?
    Can I help you with the menu?
  • 116:20 - 116:22
    No. I don't think
    I'll have anything. Thank you.
  • 116:23 - 116:25
    A glass of Moselle for me, please.
  • 116:25 - 116:26
    The same.
  • 116:29 - 116:31
    What's the matter?
  • 116:32 - 116:35
    Nothing. I'm just not hungry, that's all.
  • 116:42 - 116:44
    You know, it's, uh…
  • 116:46 - 116:49
    The last few days
    have meant a great deal to me.
  • 116:49 - 116:50
    How?
  • 116:51 - 116:55
    Well, I don't think you realize
    what a provincial man I really am.
  • 116:56 - 117:01
    Uh, I've been abroad
    just exactly once before this,
  • 117:01 - 117:04
    and that was when
    I was a dough boy in World War I.
  • 117:04 - 117:08
    I used to pass places like this
    and wonder what they were like.
  • 117:08 - 117:11
    -They've meant a great deal to me, too.
    -How?
  • 117:12 - 117:15
    They gave me back the feeling
    I had of the Americans.
  • 117:15 - 117:18
    The feeling I used to have
    when I was in your country.
  • 117:22 - 117:26
    -Too bad this isn't a magazine story.
    -Why?
  • 117:26 - 117:28
    Well, if it were a magazine story,
    two people like us,
  • 117:29 - 117:32
    the rapidly aging jurist… Oh, no, no.
  • 117:32 - 117:35
    The rapidly aging jurist
    and the beautiful widow
  • 117:36 - 117:40
    would transcend their difficulties
    and travel places
  • 117:40 - 117:42
    either by land or by sea.
  • 117:57 - 117:59
    I saw Mr. Perkins today.
  • 117:59 - 118:03
    He told me they'd showed those pictures
    in the courtroom.
  • 118:03 - 118:06
    Colonel Lawson's favorite pictures.
  • 118:07 - 118:10
    He drags them out
    at any pretext, doesn't he?
  • 118:10 - 118:13
    Colonel Lawson's private
    chamber of horrors.
  • 118:16 - 118:18
    Is that what you think we are?
  • 118:19 - 118:21
    Do you think we knew of those things?
  • 118:22 - 118:24
    Do you think we wanted
    to murder women and children?
  • 118:27 - 118:30
    Do you believe that? Do you?
  • 118:32 - 118:35
    Mrs. Bertholt,
    I don't know what to believe.
  • 118:36 - 118:39
    Good God. We're sitting here drinking.
  • 118:40 - 118:42
    How could you think that we knew?
  • 118:43 - 118:44
    We did not know.
  • 118:45 - 118:47
    We did not know.
  • 118:49 - 118:52
    As far as I can make out,
    no one in this country knew.
  • 118:56 - 119:00
    Mrs. Bertholt, your husband was one
    of the heads of the Army.
  • 119:00 - 119:03
    And he did not know.
    I tell you, he did not know.
  • 119:03 - 119:05
    It was Himmler. It was Goebbels.
  • 119:05 - 119:08
    The S.S. knew what happened.
    We did not know.
  • 119:09 - 119:10
    Listen to me.
  • 119:10 - 119:13
    There are things
    that happened on both sides.
  • 119:14 - 119:16
    My husband was a
    military man all his life.
  • 119:17 - 119:21
    He was entitled to a soldier's death.
    He asked for that.
  • 119:21 - 119:25
    I tried to get that for him, just that,
    that he would die with some honor.
  • 119:25 - 119:29
    I went from official to official.
    I begged for that.
  • 119:30 - 119:34
    That he should be permitted
    the dignity of a firing squad.
  • 119:35 - 119:37
    You know what happened?
  • 119:39 - 119:40
    He was hanged with the others
  • 119:41 - 119:44
    and after that, I knew
    what it was to hate.
  • 119:45 - 119:47
    I never left the house,
    I never left the room.
  • 119:47 - 119:49
    I drank.
  • 119:49 - 119:51
    I hated with every fiber of my being.
  • 119:51 - 119:54
    I hated every American I had ever known.
  • 119:56 - 119:59
    But one can't live with hate, I know that.
  • 120:05 - 120:09
    And we have to forget,
    if we are to go on living.
  • 120:58 - 121:00
    Herr Rolfe?
  • 121:21 - 121:23
    May it please the tribunal?
  • 121:28 - 121:31
    Yesterday the tribunal
    witnessed some films.
  • 121:34 - 121:35
    They were…
  • 121:37 - 121:38
    Shocking films,
  • 121:39 - 121:41
    devastating films.
  • 121:43 - 121:45
    As a German…
  • 121:47 - 121:52
    I feel ashamed that such things
    could have taken place in my country.
  • 121:55 - 121:58
    There can never be
    a justification for them.
  • 122:00 - 122:01
    Not in generations,
  • 122:03 - 122:05
    not in centuries.
  • 122:08 - 122:10
    But…
  • 122:13 - 122:16
    I do think it was wrong…
  • 122:18 - 122:19
    Indecent,
  • 122:21 - 122:25
    and terribly unfair of the prosecution
  • 122:26 - 122:29
    to show such films in this case,
  • 122:29 - 122:31
    in this court,
  • 122:31 - 122:35
    at this time, against these defendants!
  • 122:36 - 122:38
    And I cannot protest too strongly
  • 122:40 - 122:41
    against such tactics.
  • 122:49 - 122:52
    What is the prosecution trying to prove?
  • 122:53 - 122:55
    Is it trying to prove that
    the German people as a whole
  • 122:55 - 122:58
    were responsible for these events?
  • 122:58 - 123:01
    Or that they were even aware of them?
  • 123:01 - 123:03
    Because if he is…
  • 123:05 - 123:07
    He's not stating facts,
  • 123:09 - 123:11
    and he knows he's not.
  • 123:14 - 123:16
    The secrecy of the operations,
  • 123:17 - 123:20
    the geographical location of the camps,
  • 123:20 - 123:23
    the breakdown of communications
    in the last days of the war
  • 123:23 - 123:26
    when the exterminations rose
    into the millions
  • 123:26 - 123:30
    show only too clearly
    that he is not telling the truth!
  • 123:31 - 123:32
    The truth is
  • 123:33 - 123:37
    that these brutalities
    were brought about by the few extremists.
  • 123:38 - 123:39
    The criminals.
  • 123:42 - 123:44
    Very few German knew what was going on.
  • 123:45 - 123:46
    Very few.
  • 123:48 - 123:51
    None of us knew what was happening
  • 123:52 - 123:55
    in the places shown in these films.
  • 123:55 - 123:57
    None of us.
  • 124:03 - 124:07
    But the most ironic part of it is…
  • 124:08 - 124:12
    That the prosecution showed
    these films against these defendants,
  • 124:13 - 124:18
    men who stayed in power
    for one reason only,
  • 124:18 - 124:21
    to prevent worse things from happening.
  • 124:23 - 124:25
    Who is the braver man?
  • 124:25 - 124:29
    The man who escapes,
    or resigns in times of peril,
  • 124:30 - 124:33
    or the man who stays on his post
  • 124:33 - 124:36
    at the risk of his own personal safety?
  • 124:37 - 124:42
    The defense will present
    witnesses and letters and documents
  • 124:42 - 124:44
    from religious and political refugees
    all over the world
  • 124:44 - 124:48
    telling how Ernst Janning
    saved them from execution.
  • 124:48 - 124:50
    The defense will show that many times
  • 124:50 - 124:53
    Ernst Janning was able
    to effect mitigation of sentences
  • 124:54 - 124:58
    when, without his influence,
    the results would have been much worse.
  • 124:59 - 125:00
    The defense will show
  • 125:01 - 125:06
    that Ernst Janning's personal physician
    was a non-Aryan,
  • 125:07 - 125:08
    a Jewish man,
  • 125:10 - 125:13
    who he kept in attendance,
    much to his own peril.
  • 125:16 - 125:18
    The defense presents affidavits
  • 125:19 - 125:23
    from legal authorities
    and famed jurists the world over
  • 125:23 - 125:28
    pleading that special considerations
    must be made in this case,
  • 125:28 - 125:31
    saying that the entire work
    of Ernst Janning
  • 125:31 - 125:34
    was inspired by one motive,
    and one motive only:
  • 125:34 - 125:38
    The endeavor to preserve justice
    and the concept of justice.
  • 125:43 - 125:45
    Now,
  • 125:46 - 125:49
    what has the prosecution to offer
  • 125:51 - 125:52
    against this?
  • 125:53 - 125:55
    The prosecution, in fact,
  • 125:56 - 125:58
    has presented in the
    case of Ernst Janning,
  • 125:59 - 126:01
    only one tangible piece of evidence.
  • 126:01 - 126:02
    The Feldenstein case.
  • 126:02 - 126:04
    A notorious case,
    as the defense has said.
  • 126:04 - 126:07
    A case which never
    should have been reopened.
  • 126:07 - 126:10
    A case which the defense is obliged
  • 126:11 - 126:13
    to review now.
  • 126:14 - 126:17
    The defense calls Mrs. Elsa Lindnow.
  • 126:35 - 126:37
    Will you raise your right hand?
  • 126:38 - 126:40
    I swear by God,
    the Almighty and Omniscient,
  • 126:40 - 126:43
    that I will speak the pure truth
    and will withhold and add nothing.
  • 126:43 - 126:44
    I do.
  • 126:48 - 126:50
    Mrs. Lindnow…
  • 126:53 - 126:55
    What is your occupation?
  • 126:55 - 126:57
    I am a cleaning woman.
  • 126:58 - 127:00
    Where are you employed?
  • 127:01 - 127:05
    400… 345, Grosse Platz.
  • 127:06 - 127:09
    -Did you know Lehman Feldenstein?
    -Yes. I knew him.
  • 127:09 - 127:11
    In what capacity?
  • 127:12 - 127:15
    He was my employer in 1935.
  • 127:15 - 127:18
    Do you know the witness,
    Mrs. Irene Hoffman Wallner?
  • 127:18 - 127:19
    Yes.
  • 127:19 - 127:21
    In what capacity?
  • 127:22 - 127:24
    She was a tenant in the building.
  • 127:24 - 127:27
    Did you ever see Miss Hoffman
    and Mr. Feldenstein together?
  • 127:29 - 127:30
    Yes.
  • 127:30 - 127:32
    How did this happen?
  • 127:32 - 127:37
    Mr. Feldenstein came to see Miss Hoffman
    at her apartment.
  • 127:38 - 127:39
    Often?
  • 127:40 - 127:41
    Quite often.
  • 127:42 - 127:45
    Were there any occasions
    in which you noticed anything unusual?
  • 127:45 - 127:47
    Yes.
  • 127:48 - 127:53
    I saw Miss Hoffman kissing Mr. Feldenstein
    at the door of her apartment.
  • 127:54 - 127:57
    Was there any other occasion?
  • 127:57 - 127:59
    Yes, there was one.
  • 127:59 - 128:01
    What was it?
  • 128:01 - 128:03
    I came to Miss Hoffman's apartment.
  • 128:03 - 128:05
    Uh, I wanted to clean up.
  • 128:06 - 128:08
    I thought it was empty.
  • 128:10 - 128:15
    Uh, I saw Miss Hoffman
    sitting on Mr. Feldenstein's lap.
  • 128:16 - 128:19
    Thank you, Mrs. Lindnow. That's all.
  • 128:21 - 128:22
    Colonel Lawson?
  • 128:28 - 128:30
    Earphones, please.
  • 128:34 - 128:38
    Mrs. Lindnow,
    what are your political affiliations?
  • 128:41 - 128:44
    -Political?
    -Objection, Your Honor.
  • 128:46 - 128:50
    This witness' political affiliations
    have nothing to do with the testimony.
  • 128:50 - 128:54
    Colonel Lawson is once more trying
    to appeal to the emotion of the court.
  • 128:55 - 128:57
    Objection overruled.
  • 128:57 - 129:00
    Now would you answer
    the question, please?
  • 129:00 - 129:03
    Were you a member
    of the National Socialist Party?
  • 129:04 - 129:07
    Yes, I was.
  • 129:08 - 129:10
    We were forced to be.
  • 129:11 - 129:12
    "We were forced to be."
  • 129:14 - 129:17
    Now when did you become
    a member of the Nazi Party?
  • 129:19 - 129:22
    1933.
  • 129:23 - 129:24
    Were all German nationals forced
  • 129:24 - 129:28
    to become members
    of the Nazi Party in 1933?
  • 129:30 - 129:32
    Please answer me, Mrs. Lindnow.
  • 129:33 - 129:36
    Were you forced
    to become a member of the Nazi Party?
  • 129:41 - 129:42
    That's all.
  • 129:44 - 129:45
    Witness is excused.
  • 130:02 - 130:04
    Defense may continue.
  • 130:12 - 130:16
    The defense calls
    Irene Hoffman Wallner to the stand.
  • 130:32 - 130:34
    Mrs. Wallner…
  • 130:36 - 130:38
    You are still under oath.
  • 130:40 - 130:43
    Mrs. Wallner,
    did you come here voluntarily?
  • 130:44 - 130:47
    Did you report voluntarily
    to speak as a witness?
  • 130:47 - 130:48
    Yes.
  • 130:51 - 130:54
    Is it not true that the prosecution
    asked you to come here?
  • 130:55 - 130:58
    That it was very disagreeable
    for you to come here?
  • 130:59 - 131:03
    It is always very disagreeable
    to live over those times.
  • 131:04 - 131:06
    That would be in agreement
  • 131:06 - 131:09
    with the information I have
    that you did not want to come.
  • 131:09 - 131:11
    Thank you, Mrs. Wallner.
  • 131:11 - 131:13
    Mrs. Wallner…
  • 131:16 - 131:20
    The Nuremberg laws were
    stated September 15, 1935.
  • 131:21 - 131:24
    -Where were you at that time?
    -In Nuremberg.
  • 131:24 - 131:26
    Did you know these laws?
  • 131:26 - 131:29
    Were you aware that
    a physical relationship with Jews
  • 131:29 - 131:31
    was against the law?
  • 131:31 - 131:32
    Yes.
  • 131:33 - 131:37
    Were you aware that in Nuremberg,
    and in Nuremberg in particular,
  • 131:38 - 131:41
    not only a physical relationship with Jews
    was viewed with disdain,
  • 131:41 - 131:42
    but every social contact?
  • 131:43 - 131:44
    Yes.
  • 131:44 - 131:48
    Were you aware that it might have
    some danger for you personally?
  • 131:49 - 131:50
    Yes, I was aware of it.
  • 131:51 - 131:55
    But how can you discard a friendship
    from day to day because of some…
  • 131:55 - 131:58
    That is another question, Mrs. Wallner.
  • 131:59 - 132:01
    I did not ask you that question.
  • 132:01 - 132:04
    -Were you aware of it?
    -Yes, I was aware.
  • 132:05 - 132:08
    Yet you still continued
    to see each other?
  • 132:08 - 132:09
    Yes.
  • 132:11 - 132:12
    Remember, it was brought out
    at the tribunal
  • 132:13 - 132:14
    that Mr. Feldenstein bought you things.
  • 132:14 - 132:17
    -Candy and cigarettes?
    -Yes.
  • 132:17 - 132:20
    Remember that sometimes
    he bought you flowers?
  • 132:21 - 132:23
    Yes, he bought me many things.
  • 132:24 - 132:26
    That was because he was kind.
  • 132:27 - 132:30
    He was the kindest man I ever knew.
  • 132:33 - 132:35
    Do you know the witness,
    Mrs. Elsa Lindnow?
  • 132:36 - 132:37
    Yes, I know her.
  • 132:38 - 132:40
    Was she a cleaning woman
    at the apartment you lived in?
  • 132:40 - 132:41
    Yes.
  • 132:41 - 132:43
    Did Mr. Feldenstein come
    to see you at your apartment?
  • 132:43 - 132:44
    Yes.
  • 132:45 - 132:46
    How many times?
  • 132:48 - 132:51
    I don't, uh, remember.
  • 132:51 - 132:54
    -Several times?
    -Yes.
  • 132:54 - 132:57
    -Many times?
    -Many times.
  • 132:57 - 132:59
    -Did you kiss him?
    -Yes, I kissed him.
  • 133:00 - 133:01
    Was there more than one kiss?
  • 133:03 - 133:04
    Yes.
  • 133:05 - 133:09
    But it was not in the way
    you are trying to make it sound.
  • 133:10 - 133:13
    He was like a father to me.
  • 133:14 - 133:15
    He was more than a father.
  • 133:16 - 133:17
    More than a father?
  • 133:18 - 133:20
    -Did you sit on his lap?
    -Objection!
  • 133:20 - 133:24
    Counsel is persecuting the witness
    in the pretext of gaining testimony.
  • 133:25 - 133:27
    Objection overruled.
  • 133:27 - 133:29
    The defense is being permitted to reenact
  • 133:29 - 133:32
    what was a travesty of justice
    in the first place.
  • 133:32 - 133:37
    Colonel Lawson, the tribunal makes the
    rulings in this case, not the prosecution.
  • 133:37 - 133:39
    You may proceed.
  • 133:39 - 133:42
    -Did you sit on his lap?
    -Yes.
  • 133:42 - 133:47
    But there was nothing wrong
    or ugly about it.
  • 133:47 - 133:50
    Did you sit on his lap?
  • 133:50 - 133:52
    Yes, but…
  • 133:52 - 133:54
    You sat on his lap. What else did you do?
  • 133:56 - 133:59
    There was nothing
    that you are trying to say.
  • 133:59 - 134:00
    There was nothing like that.
  • 134:00 - 134:02
    What else did you do, Mrs. Wallner?
  • 134:04 - 134:07
    What are you trying to do?
  • 134:08 - 134:10
    Are you trying to…
  • 134:12 - 134:17
    Why do you not
    let me speak the truth?
  • 134:17 - 134:19
    That's what we want, Mrs. Wallner.
  • 134:19 - 134:21
    The truth, the truth.
  • 134:21 - 134:23
    You admitted
    that you continued to see him.
  • 134:23 - 134:26
    You admitted that
    he came to your apartment.
  • 134:26 - 134:27
    You admitted you kissed him.
  • 134:27 - 134:29
    You admitted you sat on his lap.
  • 134:29 - 134:32
    What else do you admit to? What else?
  • 134:32 - 134:33
    Nothing.
  • 134:35 - 134:37
    There was nothing like
    you're trying to make it sound.
  • 134:37 - 134:39
    What else?
  • 134:39 - 134:41
    There was nothing. Nothing.
  • 134:42 - 134:43
    Stop it.
  • 134:44 - 134:45
    --Stop it!
  • 134:46 - 134:48
    What else do you admit to.
    Mrs. Wallner? What else?
  • 134:48 - 134:49
    Herr Rolfe!
  • 134:54 - 134:56
    Are we going to do this again?
  • 135:02 - 135:03
    Your Honor,
  • 135:05 - 135:08
    the stress the defendant has been under is
    so great that he is not aware…
  • 135:08 - 135:10
    I am aware.
  • 135:10 - 135:12
    I am aware.
  • 135:12 - 135:14
    Your Honor, the defendant wishes
    to make a statement.
  • 135:14 - 135:16
    Your Honor, I believe
    the defense has a right to request
  • 135:16 - 135:19
    --Order. Order. Order!
  • 135:24 - 135:26
    Does the defendant wish
    to make a statement?
  • 135:27 - 135:30
    I wish to make a statement, yes.
  • 135:31 - 135:34
    Your Honor, I believe the defense
    has the right to request a recess…
  • 135:34 - 135:37
    Your Honor, the defendant has
    the right to make his statement now.
  • 135:37 - 135:38
    I have to speak with my client.
  • 135:38 - 135:41
    He has the right to make it now!
  • 135:52 - 135:55
    Tribunal is adjourned
    until 10:30 tomorrow morning.
  • 136:00 - 136:02
    What are you doing?
  • 136:03 - 136:05
    What do you think you're trying to do?
  • 136:06 - 136:09
    They've had Goering. Frank. Stretcher.
  • 136:09 - 136:11
    That's over.
  • 136:12 - 136:16
    Do you think I have enjoyed
    being defense counsel during this trial?
  • 136:16 - 136:20
    There were things I had to do
    in that courtroom that made me cringe.
  • 136:21 - 136:23
    Why did I do them?
  • 136:23 - 136:26
    Because I want to leave
    the German people something.
  • 136:26 - 136:28
    I want to leave them a shred of dignity.
  • 136:28 - 136:31
    I want to call a halt
    to these proceedings.
  • 136:31 - 136:34
    If we allow them
    to discredit every German like you,
  • 136:35 - 136:37
    we lose the right to
    rule ourselves forever.
  • 136:39 - 136:42
    We have to look at the future.
    We can't look back now.
  • 136:43 - 136:46
    Do you want the Americans
    to stay here forever? Do you want that?
  • 136:46 - 136:49
    I could show you a picture
    of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
  • 136:49 - 136:52
    Thousands and thousands of burned bodies.
  • 136:52 - 136:54
    Women and children.
  • 136:55 - 136:58
    Is that their superior morality?
  • 136:59 - 137:01
    Where do you think they take us?
    Do you think they know?
  • 137:01 - 137:04
    Do you think
    they have any concept of our problems?
  • 137:10 - 137:11
    What can I say to you?
  • 137:13 - 137:16
    What can I say to you to make you see?
  • 137:23 - 137:26
    There is nothing you can say.
  • 137:27 - 137:29
    Nothing.
  • 137:29 - 137:32
    Nothing has
    happened to alleviate the crisis.
  • 137:32 - 137:34
    The crisis reached a head this afternoon
  • 137:34 - 137:38
    when all rail travel between western
    zones and Berlin was stopped.
  • 137:38 - 137:41
    The blockade by land is now complete.
  • 137:48 - 137:50
    What do you think
    we're going to do, General?
  • 137:50 - 137:53
    -Do you think we'll withdraw?
    -We can't withdraw.
  • 137:54 - 137:55
    If we withdraw under pressure,
  • 137:55 - 137:57
    our prestige all over the world
    is threatened.
  • 137:57 - 137:59
    The communists will move in
    on every front.
  • 137:59 - 138:01
    What about these trials, General?
  • 138:01 - 138:04
    How do you feel about them now?
  • 138:05 - 138:07
    We're committed to the trials.
  • 138:07 - 138:11
    But I think it would be realistic
    to accelerate them as much as possible.
  • 138:11 - 138:15
    What would happen if
    they fired on one of our planes, General?
  • 138:15 - 138:17
    I'm afraid we'll have to face that
    when it happens.
  • 138:17 - 138:20
    There is no other answer
    to that question at this time.
  • 138:23 - 138:25
    You fellows should
    try some of the strudel.
  • 138:25 - 138:26
    It's excellent here.
  • 138:26 - 138:27
    No, thanks.
  • 138:28 - 138:32
    Dan, I've just come back
    from Berlin, as you know.
  • 138:32 - 138:34
    I don't think this is going to be it.
  • 138:34 - 138:36
    A lot of people do, but I don't.
  • 138:37 - 138:39
    But it is going to
    be a fight for survival
  • 138:40 - 138:42
    for the next 10 years, maybe the next 20.
  • 138:43 - 138:45
    Germany is the key to that survival.
  • 138:45 - 138:49
    Any high-school student
    in geography can tell you that.
  • 138:50 - 138:53
    Just what are you trying to say, Senator?
  • 138:53 - 138:56
    What I'm trying to say is this:
  • 138:56 - 138:59
    While nobody's trying
    to influence your decision,
  • 138:59 - 139:03
    it's important that you realize this,
    because it's a fact of life.
  • 139:03 - 139:05
    Let's face it, gentlemen.
  • 139:05 - 139:08
    The handwriting is on the wall.
  • 139:08 - 139:10
    We're going to need
    all the help we can get.
  • 139:11 - 139:14
    We're going to need
    the support of the German people.
  • 139:15 - 139:17
    More strudel, gentlemen?
  • 139:21 - 139:23
    Herr Janning, you may proceed.
  • 139:29 - 139:33
    I wish to testify about
    the Feldenstein case
  • 139:34 - 139:38
    because it was
    the most significant trial of the period.
  • 139:40 - 139:44
    It is important not only for
    the tribunal to understand it,
  • 139:45 - 139:48
    but for the whole German people.
  • 139:49 - 139:51
    But in order to understand it,
  • 139:51 - 139:55
    one must understand the period
    in which it happened.
  • 139:57 - 140:00
    There was a fever over the land.
  • 140:00 - 140:04
    A fever of disgrace,
    of indignity, of hunger.
  • 140:06 - 140:08
    We had a democracy, yes.
  • 140:08 - 140:11
    But it was torn by elements within.
  • 140:12 - 140:15
    Above all, there was fear:
  • 140:16 - 140:19
    Fear of today, fear of tomorrow,
  • 140:20 - 140:25
    fear of our neighbors,
    and fear of ourselves.
  • 140:26 - 140:29
    Only when you understand that,
  • 140:29 - 140:32
    can you understand
    what Hitler meant to us.
  • 140:32 - 140:34
    Because he said to us:
  • 140:36 - 140:37
    "Lift your heads.
  • 140:37 - 140:39
    "Be proud to be German.
  • 140:40 - 140:42
    "There are devils among us:
  • 140:42 - 140:45
    "Communists, liberals, Jews, gypsies.
  • 140:45 - 140:50
    "Once these devils will be destroyed,
    your misery will be destroyed."
  • 140:52 - 140:57
    It was the old, old story
    of the sacrificial lamb.
  • 141:01 - 141:03
    What about those of us who knew better?
  • 141:04 - 141:07
    We who knew the words were lies,
    and worse than lies?
  • 141:08 - 141:10
    Why did we sit silent?
  • 141:10 - 141:11
    Why did we take part?
  • 141:13 - 141:16
    Because we loved our country.
  • 141:17 - 141:18
    What difference does it make
  • 141:19 - 141:22
    if a few political extremists
    lose their rights?
  • 141:22 - 141:27
    What difference does it make if a
    few racial minorities lose their rights?
  • 141:27 - 141:29
    It is only a passing phase.
  • 141:29 - 141:32
    It is only a stage we are going through.
  • 141:32 - 141:34
    It will be discarded sooner or later.
  • 141:34 - 141:38
    Hitler himself
    will be discarded sooner or later.
  • 141:39 - 141:40
    The country is in danger.
  • 141:40 - 141:43
    We will march out of the shadows.
    We will go forward.
  • 141:43 - 141:46
    Forward is the great password.
  • 141:50 - 141:54
    And history tells
    how well we succeeded, Your Honor.
  • 141:56 - 141:58
    We succeeded beyond our wildest dreams.
  • 141:59 - 142:03
    The very elements
    of hate and power about Hitler
  • 142:03 - 142:06
    that mesmerized Germany
    mesmerized the world.
  • 142:07 - 142:10
    We found ourselves
    with sudden, powerful allies.
  • 142:11 - 142:14
    Things that had been denied
    to us as a democracy
  • 142:14 - 142:16
    were open to us now.
  • 142:16 - 142:19
    The world said, "Go ahead, take it.
  • 142:20 - 142:21
    "Take it.
  • 142:21 - 142:25
    "Take Sudetenland,
    take the Rhineland, remilitarize it.
  • 142:25 - 142:27
    "Take all of Austria. Take it."
  • 142:31 - 142:34
    And then, one day, we looked around
  • 142:35 - 142:38
    and found that
    we were in an even more terrible danger.
  • 142:38 - 142:41
    The ritual began in this courtroom,
  • 142:41 - 142:44
    swept over the land
    like a raging, roaring disease.
  • 142:46 - 142:49
    What was going to be a passing phase
  • 142:51 - 142:53
    had become the way of life.
  • 142:58 - 143:00
    Your Honor…
  • 143:02 - 143:07
    I was content to sit
    silent during this trial.
  • 143:08 - 143:12
    I was content to tend my roses.
  • 143:14 - 143:16
    I was even content
  • 143:17 - 143:20
    to let counsel try to save my name.
  • 143:21 - 143:23
    Until I realized
  • 143:24 - 143:29
    that in order to save it,
    he would have to raise the specter again.
  • 143:33 - 143:35
    You have seen him do it.
  • 143:35 - 143:37
    He has done it here in this courtroom.
  • 143:38 - 143:43
    He has suggested that the Third Reich
    worked for the benefit of people.
  • 143:43 - 143:48
    He has suggested that we sterilized men
    for the welfare of the country.
  • 143:48 - 143:50
    He has suggested that perhaps
  • 143:50 - 143:54
    the old Jew did sleep
    with the 16-year-old girl, after all.
  • 143:56 - 143:59
    Once more, it is being done
  • 144:00 - 144:03
    for love of country.
  • 144:05 - 144:09
    It is not easy to tell the truth.
  • 144:11 - 144:14
    But if there is to be
    any salvation for Germany,
  • 144:15 - 144:19
    we who know our guilt must admit it,
  • 144:19 - 144:21
    whatever the pain
  • 144:23 - 144:24
    and humiliation.
  • 144:30 - 144:32
    I had reached my verdict
  • 144:33 - 144:35
    on the Feldenstein case
  • 144:36 - 144:38
    before I ever came into the courtroom.
  • 144:38 - 144:41
    I would have found him guilty,
    whatever the evidence.
  • 144:41 - 144:45
    It was not a trial at all.
    It was a sacrificial ritual
  • 144:45 - 144:48
    in which Feldenstein, the Jew,
    was the helpless victim.
  • 144:48 - 144:50
    Your Honor, I must interrupt.
  • 144:51 - 144:53
    The defendant is not aware
    of what he is saying.
  • 144:53 - 144:55
    He is not aware of the implications…
  • 144:55 - 144:58
    I am aware. I am aware.
  • 144:59 - 145:02
    My counsel would have you believe
  • 145:02 - 145:05
    we were not aware
    of the concentration camps.
  • 145:06 - 145:08
    Not aware.
  • 145:09 - 145:11
    Where were we?
  • 145:11 - 145:15
    Where were we when Hitler began
    shrieking his hate in the Reichstag?
  • 145:15 - 145:17
    Where were we when our neighbors
    were being dragged out
  • 145:17 - 145:19
    in the middle of the night to Dachau?
  • 145:19 - 145:23
    Where were we when every village
    in Germany has a railroad terminal
  • 145:23 - 145:25
    where cattle cars
    were filled with children
  • 145:25 - 145:28
    being carried off to their extermination?
  • 145:29 - 145:32
    Where were we
    when they cried out in the night to us?
  • 145:32 - 145:35
    Were we deaf? Dumb? Blind?
  • 145:35 - 145:37
    Your Honor, I must protest.
  • 145:37 - 145:42
    My counsel says we were not aware
    of the extermination of the millions.
  • 145:43 - 145:45
    He would give you the excuse
  • 145:45 - 145:50
    we were only aware
    of the extermination of the hundreds.
  • 145:51 - 145:54
    Does that make us any the less guilty?
  • 145:56 - 145:58
    Maybe we didn't know the details.
  • 145:58 - 146:03
    But if we didn't know,
    it was because we didn't want to know.
  • 146:03 - 146:05
    Traitor! Traitor!
  • 146:05 - 146:09
    Order. Order! Order!
  • 146:10 - 146:13
    Put that man back in his seat
    and keep him there.
  • 146:17 - 146:20
    I am going to tell them the truth.
  • 146:21 - 146:23
    I am going to tell them the truth,
  • 146:23 - 146:26
    if the whole world conspires against it.
  • 146:27 - 146:29
    I am going to tell them the truth
  • 146:29 - 146:32
    about their ministry of justice.
  • 146:34 - 146:38
    Werner Lammpe,
    an old man who cries into his Bible now.
  • 146:40 - 146:43
    An old man who profited
    by the property expropriation
  • 146:43 - 146:46
    of every man he sent
    to a concentration camp.
  • 146:46 - 146:48
    Fried rich Hoffstetter,
  • 146:49 - 146:52
    the good German
    who knew how to take orders,
  • 146:52 - 146:56
    who sent men before him
    to be sterilized like so many digits.
  • 146:59 - 147:01
    Emil Hahn,
  • 147:02 - 147:05
    the decayed, corrupt bigot,
  • 147:05 - 147:08
    obsessed by the evil within himself.
  • 147:13 - 147:15
    And Ernst Janning…
  • 147:17 - 147:19
    Worse than any of them
  • 147:21 - 147:23
    because he knew what they were,
  • 147:24 - 147:26
    and he went along with them.
  • 147:29 - 147:31
    Ernst Janning,
  • 147:32 - 147:34
    who made his life…
  • 147:36 - 147:37
    Excrement…
  • 147:39 - 147:42
    Because he walked with them.
  • 149:09 - 149:10
    Your Honor,
  • 149:12 - 149:13
    it is my duty
  • 149:15 - 149:17
    to defend Ernst Janning.
  • 149:18 - 149:21
    And yet, Ernst Janning
    has said he is guilty.
  • 149:22 - 149:26
    There is no doubt he feels his guilt.
  • 149:28 - 149:32
    He made a great error
    in going along with the Nazi Movement
  • 149:33 - 149:36
    hoping it would be good for his country.
  • 149:37 - 149:40
    But if he is to be found guilty,
  • 149:42 - 149:46
    there are others who also went along,
  • 149:47 - 149:49
    who also must be found guilty.
  • 149:51 - 149:53
    Ernst Janning said:
  • 149:54 - 149:57
    "We succeeded beyond our wildest dreams."
  • 149:59 - 150:02
    Why did we succeed, Your Honor?
  • 150:04 - 150:06
    What about the rest of the world?
  • 150:08 - 150:12
    Did it not know
    the intentions of the Third Reich?
  • 150:13 - 150:17
    Did it not hear the words
    of Hitler's broadcasts all over the world?
  • 150:17 - 150:20
    Did it not read his intentions
    in Mein Kampf,
  • 150:20 - 150:23
    published in every corner of the world?
  • 150:24 - 150:27
    Where is the responsibility
    of the Soviet Union
  • 150:27 - 150:31
    who signed in 1939 the pact with Hitler,
  • 150:31 - 150:33
    enabled him to make war?
  • 150:35 - 150:37
    Are we now to find Russia guilty?
  • 150:39 - 150:42
    Where is the responsibility of the Vatican
  • 150:42 - 150:45
    who signed in 1933
    the concordat with Hitler,
  • 150:46 - 150:49
    giving him his first tremendous prestige?
  • 150:50 - 150:53
    Are we now to find the Vatican guilty?
  • 150:55 - 150:58
    Where is the responsibility
    of the world leader Winston Churchill,
  • 150:58 - 151:02
    who said in an open letter
    to the London Times in 1938,
  • 151:02 - 151:06
    1938, Your Honor:
  • 151:07 - 151:10
    "Were England to suffer
    a national disaster, I should pray to God
  • 151:10 - 151:15
    "to send a man of the strength of mind
    and will of an Adolf Hitler."
  • 151:15 - 151:18
    Are we now to find
    Winston Churchill guilty?
  • 151:18 - 151:22
    Where is the responsibility
    of those American industrialists
  • 151:22 - 151:24
    who helped Hitler
    to rebuild his armaments,
  • 151:24 - 151:27
    and profited by that rebuilding?
  • 151:28 - 151:31
    Are we now to find
    the American industrialists guilty?
  • 151:31 - 151:33
    No, Your Honor. No.
  • 151:35 - 151:37
    Germany alone is not guilty.
  • 151:37 - 151:41
    The whole world
    is as responsible for Hitler as Germany.
  • 151:41 - 151:43
    It is an easy thing to condemn
    one man in the dock.
  • 151:44 - 151:45
    It's easy to condemn the German people,
  • 151:45 - 151:48
    to speak of the basic flaw
    in the German character
  • 151:48 - 151:51
    that allowed Hitler to rise to power,
    and at the same time,
  • 151:51 - 151:53
    comfortably ignore
    the basic flaw of character
  • 151:53 - 151:57
    that made the Russians sign pacts
    with him, Winston Churchill praise him,
  • 151:57 - 151:59
    American industrialists profit by him.
  • 152:04 - 152:07
    Ernst Janning said he is guilty.
  • 152:09 - 152:10
    If he is,
  • 152:11 - 152:15
    Ernst Janning's guilt
    is the world's guilt.
  • 152:17 - 152:20
    No more, no less.
  • 152:34 - 152:37
    Major, we have to give
    the Military Governor
  • 152:37 - 152:39
    every help that we can give him.
  • 152:39 - 152:43
    We have to get 700 tons in the air a day.
  • 152:43 - 152:44
    700 tons.
  • 152:50 - 152:52
    This is some operation.
  • 152:54 - 152:58
    Did you ever think we'd be flying coal
    and tomatoes in these crates?
  • 153:03 - 153:06
    Tad, you and I
    have been friends a long time.
  • 153:06 - 153:08
    That's why I called you here.
  • 153:12 - 153:14
    What are you going to do
    in court tomorrow?
  • 153:18 - 153:20
    You know damn well what I'm goin' to do.
  • 153:21 - 153:22
    I know what you want to do:
  • 153:22 - 153:26
    You'd like to recommend they put 'em
    behind bars and throw away the key.
  • 153:26 - 153:29
    You know what's going on here now?
  • 153:30 - 153:31
    Yeah.
  • 153:33 - 153:34
    I know what's going on.
  • 153:35 - 153:37
    Tad, you're an army man.
    You know what we're up against.
  • 153:37 - 153:39
    The others may not, but you do.
  • 153:39 - 153:41
    I'll tell you the truth.
  • 153:41 - 153:45
    I don't know what's going to happen
    if they fire on one of those planes.
  • 153:46 - 153:48
    I don't know what's going to happen.
  • 153:48 - 153:52
    If Berlin goes, Germany goes.
  • 153:53 - 153:56
    If Germany goes, Europe goes.
  • 153:57 - 153:59
    That's the way things stand.
  • 154:01 - 154:02
    That's the way they stand.
  • 154:02 - 154:05
    Look, Matt, I'm goin' to go the limit.
  • 154:06 - 154:07
    And not you, not the Pentagon,
  • 154:07 - 154:09
    not God on his throne
    is going to make me…
  • 154:09 - 154:12
    Who do you think you're talking to?
  • 154:14 - 154:16
    Who the hell do you
    think you're talking to?
  • 154:17 - 154:19
    When you were marching into Dachau
    with those troops, I was there, too.
  • 154:19 - 154:22
    You think I'll ever forget it?
  • 154:23 - 154:25
    Look, I'm not your commanding officer.
  • 154:25 - 154:28
    I can't influence your decision,
    and I don't want to.
  • 154:28 - 154:32
    But I want to give this to you,
    and I want to give it to you straight.
  • 154:32 - 154:35
    We need the help of the German people.
  • 154:37 - 154:39
    And you don't get the help
    of the German people
  • 154:40 - 154:43
    by sentencing their leaders
    to stiff prison sentences.
  • 154:55 - 154:56
    Tad…
  • 154:57 - 154:59
    The thing to do is survive, isn't it?
  • 155:00 - 155:04
    Survive as best we can, but survive.
  • 155:14 - 155:16
    Just for laughs, Matt,
  • 155:17 - 155:19
    what was the war all about?
  • 155:21 - 155:23
    What was it about?
  • 155:30 - 155:33
    And that concludes
    presentation of documentary evidence
  • 155:34 - 155:36
    against these defendants.
  • 155:45 - 155:46
    Your Honors,
  • 155:48 - 155:52
    during the three years that have passed
    since the end of the war in Europe,
  • 155:53 - 155:57
    mankind has not crossed over into Jordan.
  • 155:58 - 156:02
    In our own country,
    fear of war has been revived.
  • 156:02 - 156:06
    And we must look once more
    to our defenses.
  • 156:07 - 156:11
    There's talk of cold war,
    while men and women die in real wars.
  • 156:13 - 156:15
    And the echoes of persecution
  • 156:16 - 156:18
    and atrocities
  • 156:19 - 156:21
    will not be stilled.
  • 156:23 - 156:27
    These events cannot help
    but color what happens in this courtroom.
  • 156:30 - 156:33
    But somewhere in the midst
    of these events,
  • 156:35 - 156:40
    the responsibility for the crimes
    that we brought forward during this trial
  • 156:41 - 156:45
    must be placed in true perspective.
  • 156:46 - 156:50
    And this is the decision
    that faces Your Honors.
  • 156:52 - 156:55
    It is the dilemma of our times.
  • 156:58 - 156:59
    It is a dilemma that…
  • 157:02 - 157:04
    That rests with you.
  • 157:10 - 157:12
    The prosecution rests.
  • 157:34 - 157:37
    The defendants may now
    make their final statements.
  • 157:42 - 157:45
    Defendant Emil Hahn
    may address the tribunal.
  • 157:51 - 157:53
    Your Honors,
  • 157:53 - 157:56
    I do not evade
    the responsibility for my actions.
  • 157:57 - 158:02
    On the contrary, I stand by them
    before the entire world.
  • 158:03 - 158:06
    But I will not follow
    the policy of others.
  • 158:08 - 158:10
    I will not say of our policy today
    that it was wrong
  • 158:10 - 158:12
    when yesterday I say it was right.
  • 158:14 - 158:16
    Germany was fighting for its life.
  • 158:17 - 158:20
    Certain measures were needed
    to protect it from its enemies.
  • 158:20 - 158:23
    I cannot say that I am sorry
    we applied those measures.
  • 158:23 - 158:26
    We were a bulwark against Bolshevism.
  • 158:27 - 158:29
    We were a pillar of Western culture.
  • 158:31 - 158:34
    A bulwark and a pillar
    the West may yet wish to retain.
  • 158:39 - 158:43
    The defendant Fried rich Hoffstetter
    may address the tribunal.
  • 158:51 - 158:54
    I have served my
    country throughout my life
  • 158:55 - 158:58
    and in whatever
    position I was assigned to,
  • 158:58 - 159:02
    in faithfulness, with a pure heart,
    and without malice.
  • 159:04 - 159:08
    I followed the concept that I believed
    to be the highest in my profession.
  • 159:09 - 159:11
    The concept that says:
  • 159:11 - 159:17
    "To sacrifice one's own sense of justice
    to the authoritative legal order.
  • 159:18 - 159:20
    "To ask only what the law is
  • 159:21 - 159:24
    "and not to ask whether or not
    it is also justice."
  • 159:25 - 159:28
    As a judge, I could do no other.
  • 159:29 - 159:32
    I believe Your Honors will find me,
  • 159:32 - 159:34
    and millions of Germans like me
  • 159:34 - 159:37
    who believed they were
    doing their duty to their country,
  • 159:37 - 159:40
    to be not guilty.
  • 159:45 - 159:49
    The defendant Werner Lammpe
    may address the tribunal.
  • 159:57 - 159:58
    Your Honors…
  • 160:10 - 160:11
    Your Honors…
  • 160:30 - 160:34
    The defendant Ernst Janning
    may address the tribunal.
  • 160:44 - 160:47
    I have nothing to add to what I have said.
  • 160:58 - 161:00
    The testimony
    has been received in the case.
  • 161:00 - 161:02
    Final arguments have been heard.
  • 161:02 - 161:07
    There remains nothing now but the task
    of the tribunal to render its decision.
  • 161:08 - 161:11
    The tribunal will recess
    until further notification.
  • 161:33 - 161:35
    Now, I've collected
    several precedents and arguments here
  • 161:36 - 161:38
    that have a bearing
    on the basis of the case,
  • 161:38 - 161:42
    which is, of course, the conflict between
    allegiance to international law
  • 161:42 - 161:45
    and to the laws of one's own country.
  • 161:45 - 161:49
    Dan, we have a mountain
    of material to go over here.
  • 161:50 - 161:52
    What are you looking at, Dan?
  • 161:52 - 161:53
    Hmm? Oh, I was…
  • 161:53 - 161:56
    I was, uh, looking at
    some of these pictures
  • 161:56 - 161:58
    attached to the warrants for arrest.
  • 161:58 - 161:59
    What pictures?
  • 162:00 - 162:04
    Well, there's Petersen,
    before they operated on him.
  • 162:05 - 162:07
    And here's Irene Hoffman.
  • 162:07 - 162:10
    She really was 16 once, wasn't she?
  • 162:12 - 162:13
    Feldenstein.
  • 162:15 - 162:18
    And here's the situation of a boy,
  • 162:18 - 162:21
    certainly couldn't have been more than 14.
  • 162:21 - 162:24
    Executed for saying things
    against the Third Reich.
  • 162:24 - 162:27
    "By order of justice
    Fried rich Hoffstetter."
  • 162:28 - 162:32
    If I may say so, more pertinent
    to the legal basis of the case,
  • 162:33 - 162:35
    I have the opening address
    of the French prosecutor
  • 162:35 - 162:38
    before the International
    Military Tribunal.
  • 162:38 - 162:41
    "It is obvious that
    in the state organized along modern lines
  • 162:41 - 162:46
    "responsibility is confined
    to those who act directly for the State.
  • 162:46 - 162:50
    "Since they alone are in a position to
    judge the legitimacy of the given orders,
  • 162:50 - 162:52
    "they alone can be prosecuted."
  • 162:52 - 162:56
    I have another
    from Professor Jahrreiss' legal aspects,
  • 162:57 - 162:59
    trial of the major war criminals.
  • 162:59 - 163:03
    On the basis of these, I don't see where
    the prosecution has put forth
  • 163:03 - 163:06
    a really clear-cut case
    against the defense
  • 163:06 - 163:08
    pertaining to the
    charges in the indictment.
  • 163:08 - 163:10
    Regardless of the acts committed,
  • 163:10 - 163:13
    we cannot make the interpretation
    that these defendants
  • 163:13 - 163:17
    are really responsible
    for crimes against humanity.
  • 163:20 - 163:21
    What do you think, Dan?
  • 163:21 - 163:23
    Dan, we've been going over
    these points all day.
  • 163:23 - 163:25
    If it isn't clear now…
  • 163:27 - 163:30
    Aren't you going to look
    at these precedents?
  • 163:30 - 163:32
    Aren't you interested at all?
  • 163:35 - 163:37
    Yes, I'm interested, Curtiss.
  • 163:38 - 163:40
    You were speaking of crimes
    against humanity
  • 163:40 - 163:43
    saying that the defendants
    were not responsible for their acts.
  • 163:43 - 163:46
    I'd like you to explain that to me.
  • 163:46 - 163:48
    I've just been explaining it.
  • 163:48 - 163:50
    Well, maybe.
  • 163:50 - 163:54
    But all I've heard is a lot of legalistic
    double-talk and rationalization.
  • 163:55 - 163:59
    You know, Curtiss,
    when I first became a judge,
  • 163:59 - 164:03
    I… I knew there were certain people
    in town I wasn't supposed to touch.
  • 164:03 - 164:07
    I knew that if I was to remain a judge,
    this was so.
  • 164:08 - 164:11
    But how in God's name
    do you expect me to look the other way
  • 164:11 - 164:13
    at the murder of six million people?
  • 164:13 - 164:14
    Oh, I'm sure he didn't mean that.
  • 164:14 - 164:17
    I'm not asking you
    to look the other way at them.
  • 164:17 - 164:21
    I'm asking you, what good is it
    going to do to pursue this policy?
  • 164:23 - 164:28
    Curtiss, you were saying that the men
    are not responsible for their acts.
  • 164:28 - 164:30
    You're going to have
    to explain that to me.
  • 164:30 - 164:33
    You're going to
    have to explain it very carefully.
  • 164:41 - 164:43
    The tribunal is now in session.
  • 164:43 - 164:47
    God bless the United States of America
    and this honorable tribunal.
  • 165:08 - 165:12
    The trial conducted before this
    tribunal began over eight months ago.
  • 165:12 - 165:16
    The record of evidence
    is more than 10,000 pages long
  • 165:16 - 165:19
    and final arguments of counsel
    have been concluded.
  • 165:22 - 165:26
    Simple murders and atrocities
    do not constitute
  • 165:27 - 165:30
    the gravamen of the charges
    in this indictment.
  • 165:30 - 165:34
    Rather, the charge is that
    of conscious participation…
  • 165:36 - 165:39
    In a nationwide,
    government-organized system
  • 165:39 - 165:41
    of cruelty and injustice
  • 165:42 - 165:46
    in violation of every moral
    and legal principle
  • 165:46 - 165:48
    known to all civilized nations.
  • 165:50 - 165:54
    The tribunal has
    carefully studied the record
  • 165:54 - 165:56
    and found therein
  • 165:56 - 166:02
    abundant evidence to support
    beyond a reasonable doubt
  • 166:03 - 166:06
    the charges against these defendants.
  • 166:17 - 166:18
    Herr Rolfe
  • 166:19 - 166:22
    in his very skillful defense
  • 166:23 - 166:26
    has asserted that there are others
  • 166:28 - 166:31
    who must share the ultimate responsibility
  • 166:31 - 166:33
    for what happened here in Germany.
  • 166:33 - 166:35
    There is truth in this.
  • 166:37 - 166:42
    The real complaining party at the
    bar in this courtroom is civilization.
  • 166:44 - 166:46
    But the tribunal does say
  • 166:47 - 166:51
    that the men in the dock
    are responsible for their actions.
  • 166:54 - 166:57
    Men who sat in black robes…
  • 166:59 - 167:02
    In judgment on other men.
  • 167:05 - 167:06
    Men who took part
  • 167:08 - 167:11
    in the enactment of laws and decrees…
  • 167:14 - 167:18
    The purpose of which
    was the extermination of human beings.
  • 167:18 - 167:21
    Men who, in executive positions,
  • 167:22 - 167:26
    actively participated
    in the enforcement of these laws,
  • 167:27 - 167:30
    illegal even under German law.
  • 167:37 - 167:38
    The principle
  • 167:39 - 167:45
    of criminal law in every civilized society
    has this in common:
  • 167:47 - 167:52
    Any person who sways another
    to commit murder,
  • 167:54 - 167:56
    any person who furnishes
  • 167:57 - 168:01
    the lethal weapon
    for the purpose of the crime,
  • 168:02 - 168:06
    any person who is an accessory
    to the crime
  • 168:07 - 168:09
    is guilty.
  • 168:14 - 168:15
    Herr Rolfe
  • 168:17 - 168:20
    further asserts that the defendant Janning
  • 168:22 - 168:24
    was an extraordinary jurist
  • 168:24 - 168:27
    and acted in what he thought
    was the best interest of his country.
  • 168:28 - 168:30
    There is truth in this also.
  • 168:32 - 168:33
    Janning, to be sure,
  • 168:35 - 168:36
    is a tragic figure.
  • 168:37 - 168:40
    We believe he loathed the evil he did.
  • 168:41 - 168:44
    But compassion
    for the present torture of his soul
  • 168:44 - 168:46
    must not beget forgetfulness
  • 168:47 - 168:52
    of the torture and the death of millions
    by the government of which he was a part.
  • 168:53 - 168:55
    Janning's record and his fate
  • 168:55 - 169:00
    illuminate the most shattering truth
    that has emerged from this trial.
  • 169:00 - 169:05
    If he and all of the other defendants
    had been degraded perverts,
  • 169:05 - 169:07
    if all of the leaders of the Third Reich
  • 169:07 - 169:11
    had been sadistic monsters and maniacs,
  • 169:12 - 169:16
    then these events would have
    no more moral significance
  • 169:16 - 169:19
    than an earthquake,
    or any other natural catastrophe.
  • 169:20 - 169:21
    But this trial has shown
  • 169:23 - 169:25
    that under a national crisis,
  • 169:26 - 169:29
    ordinary, even able and extraordinary men
  • 169:31 - 169:34
    can delude themselves
    into the commission of crimes
  • 169:35 - 169:38
    so vast and heinous
    that they beggar the imagination.
  • 169:38 - 169:41
    No one who has sat through the trial
    can ever forget them.
  • 169:43 - 169:46
    Men sterilized because
    of political belief.
  • 169:47 - 169:49
    A mockery made of friendship and faith.
  • 169:50 - 169:52
    The murder of children.
  • 169:53 - 169:55
    How easily it can happen.
  • 169:57 - 170:00
    There are those in our own country, too,
  • 170:00 - 170:04
    who today speak
    of the protection of country, of survival.
  • 170:04 - 170:08
    A decision must be made
    in the life of every nation
  • 170:08 - 170:12
    at the very moment when the
    grasp of the enemy is at its throat.
  • 170:12 - 170:16
    Then it seems that the only way to survive
    is to use the means of the enemy,
  • 170:16 - 170:20
    to rest survival upon what is expedient,
    to look the other way.
  • 170:22 - 170:25
    Well, then, the answer to that is:
  • 170:26 - 170:27
    survival as what?
  • 170:28 - 170:30
    A country isn't a rock.
  • 170:31 - 170:33
    It's not an extension of one's self.
  • 170:34 - 170:36
    It's what it stands for.
  • 170:36 - 170:40
    It's what it stands for when standing for
    something is the most difficult.
  • 170:44 - 170:46
    Before the people of the world
  • 170:47 - 170:49
    let it now be noted
  • 170:51 - 170:54
    that here in our decision,
    this is what we stand for:
  • 170:55 - 170:57
    Justice,
  • 170:57 - 170:59
    truth…
  • 171:01 - 171:04
    And the value of a single human being.
  • 171:15 - 171:18
    The marshal will produce
    before the tribunal the defendant Hahn.
  • 171:21 - 171:23
    Emil Hahn,
  • 171:23 - 171:25
    the tribunal finds you guilty
  • 171:26 - 171:28
    and sentences you to life imprisonment.
  • 171:28 - 171:32
    Today you sentence me.
    Tomorrow the Bolsheviks sentence you.
  • 171:39 - 171:43
    The marshal will produce the defendant
    Hoffstetter before the tribunal.
  • 171:46 - 171:49
    Fried rich Hoffstetter,
  • 171:49 - 171:53
    the tribunal finds you guilty
    and sentences you to life imprisonment.
  • 171:58 - 172:02
    The marshal will produce
    the defendant Lammpe before the tribunal.
  • 172:08 - 172:09
    Werner Lammpe,
  • 172:11 - 172:13
    the tribunal finds you guilty
  • 172:14 - 172:17
    and sentences you to life imprisonment.
  • 172:27 - 172:31
    The marshal will produce the defendant
    Ernst Janning before the tribunal.
  • 172:47 - 172:49
    Ernst Janning,
  • 172:50 - 172:52
    the tribunal finds you guilty
  • 172:53 - 172:56
    and sentences you to life imprisonment.
  • 173:01 - 173:03
    He doesn't understand.
  • 173:05 - 173:07
    He just doesn't understand.
  • 173:08 - 173:09
    He understands.
  • 173:23 - 173:25
    Justice Ives dissenting.
  • 173:28 - 173:30
    I wish to point out strongly
  • 173:31 - 173:34
    my dissenting vote
    from the decision of this tribunal
  • 173:34 - 173:36
    as stated by Justice Haywood,
  • 173:36 - 173:39
    and in which Justice Norris concurred.
  • 173:40 - 173:43
    The issue of the actions
    of the defendants
  • 173:43 - 173:47
    who believed they were acting
    in the best interests of their country
  • 173:47 - 173:51
    is an issue that cannot be
    decided in a courtroom alone.
  • 173:53 - 173:55
    It can only be decided objectively
  • 173:56 - 174:00
    in years to come,
    in the true perspective of history.
  • 174:08 - 174:10
    And, uh, where shall I put
    these books, Your Honor?
  • 174:10 - 174:13
    -Put them in the trunk, Mr. Halbestadt.
    -Yeah.
  • 174:16 - 174:20
    Your Honor, here's something for you
    to have on the plane.
  • 174:20 - 174:23
    Oh, oh, no. If you give me
    any more food, Mrs. Halbestadt,
  • 174:23 - 174:25
    I… I won't have any room
    for anything else.
  • 174:25 - 174:27
    But it's strudel, the way you like it.
  • 174:28 - 174:29
    Thank you. Thank you for everything.
  • 174:29 - 174:30
    Yeah.
  • 174:31 - 174:33
    -I'll put it in the car for you.
    -Thanks.
  • 174:33 - 174:35
    Tickets, passport, immunization.
    All in order.
  • 174:36 - 174:38
    I'll have your baggage checks
    and boarding pass at the airport.
  • 174:38 - 174:40
    -Thank you.
    -See you there no later than 3:00.
  • 174:40 - 174:41
    Right.
  • 174:41 - 174:44
    Oh, and give my regards
    to Miss… What was her name?
  • 174:44 - 174:46
    Scheffler. Elsa.
  • 174:47 - 174:48
    That's one you owe me.
  • 174:48 - 174:49
    What do you mean?
  • 174:49 - 174:53
    Americans aren't very popular
    in Nuremberg this morning.
  • 175:54 - 175:55
    Good afternoon, Your Honor.
  • 175:55 - 175:57
    Good afternoon.
  • 175:58 - 176:03
    I came here at the request
    of my client, Ernst Janning.
  • 176:05 - 176:06
    He wishes to see you.
  • 176:07 - 176:10
    I'm just leaving for the airport.
  • 176:11 - 176:15
    He says it would mean a great deal to him.
  • 176:21 - 176:25
    Have you heard about the verdict
    in the I.G. Farben case?
  • 176:26 - 176:27
    Most of them were acquitted.
  • 176:27 - 176:30
    The others received light sentences.
  • 176:30 - 176:32
    The verdict came in today.
  • 176:32 - 176:33
    No, I hadn't heard.
  • 176:35 - 176:37
    I will make you a wager.
  • 176:37 - 176:39
    I don't make wagers.
  • 176:40 - 176:42
    A gentleman's wager.
  • 176:43 - 176:49
    In five years, the men you sentenced
    to life imprisonment will be free.
  • 176:52 - 176:56
    Herr Rolfe, I have admired your work
    in the courtroom for many months.
  • 176:57 - 176:59
    You are particularly brilliant
    in your use of logic.
  • 176:59 - 177:00
    Thank you.
  • 177:00 - 177:05
    So what you suggest may very well happen.
  • 177:06 - 177:10
    It is logical,
    in view of the times in which we live.
  • 177:11 - 177:14
    But to be logical is not to be right.
  • 177:14 - 177:18
    And nothing on God's earth
    could ever make it right.
  • 177:29 - 177:30
    Someone to see you.
  • 177:43 - 177:44
    Herr Janning.
  • 177:46 - 177:48
    Judge Haywood.
  • 177:50 - 177:52
    Please, sit down.
  • 177:53 - 177:56
    Thank you. You wanted to see me?
  • 177:57 - 178:00
    Yes. There is something
    I… I want to give you.
  • 178:01 - 178:02
    A record.
  • 178:05 - 178:06
    A record of my cases.
  • 178:07 - 178:09
    The ones I remember.
  • 178:10 - 178:13
    I want to give them
    to someone I can trust,
  • 178:14 - 178:17
    someone I felt I got to know
    during the trial.
  • 178:24 - 178:25
    Thank you.
  • 178:28 - 178:29
    I'll take good care of them.
  • 178:31 - 178:34
    I know the pressures
    that have been brought upon you.
  • 178:35 - 178:37
    You will be criticized greatly.
  • 178:38 - 178:41
    Your decision will not be a popular one.
  • 178:43 - 178:46
    But if it means anything to you,
  • 178:47 - 178:51
    you have the respect
    of at least one of the men you convicted.
  • 178:52 - 178:58
    By all that is right in this world,
    your verdict was a just one.
  • 179:00 - 179:01
    Thank you.
  • 179:03 - 179:07
    What you said in the courtroom,
    it needed to be said.
  • 179:08 - 179:09
    Judge Haywood…
  • 179:13 - 179:15
    The reason I asked you to come…
  • 179:23 - 179:24
    Those people,
  • 179:26 - 179:28
    those millions of people,
  • 179:30 - 179:32
    I never knew it would come to that.
  • 179:33 - 179:35
    You must believe it.
  • 179:35 - 179:37
    You must believe it.
  • 179:40 - 179:42
    Herr Janning,
  • 179:43 - 179:47
    it came to that the first time
    you sentenced a man to death
  • 179:47 - 179:49
    you knew to be innocent.
Title:
纽伦堡的审判 Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) 1080p 中文字幕
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Video Language:
English
Duration:
03:01:51

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