Courtesy of guest blogger, Trevor Korb
As the International Military Tribunal (IMT) took stride in late 1945, the United States began negotiating with the other major Allied powers about the possibility of further trials more expansive in scope. The result of these negotiations would be Council Control Law No. 10, signed December 20, 1945, which granted authorization to conduct trials of suspected war criminals in each respective occupied zone. While each Allied power pursued different sets of cases, the stated objective of the agreement was to “establish a uniform legal basis in Germany for the prosecution of war criminals and other similar offenders” (Lippman, p. 181). Recognizing that criminal acts were committed by many more individuals than could be prosecuted the International Military Tribunal, which focused solely on high-ranking Nazis such as Hermann Goering or Martin Bormann, these subsequent trials sought to indict Germans from both the public and private sectors, within and outside of Nazi government, including military generals, judges, physicians, and leading industrialists. Continue reading →