Difference between revisions of "Doctors' Trial" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Courtroom_during_the_Doctors'_trial.jpg|thumb|300px|Courtroom of Palace of Justice (Nuremberg) during the Doctors' Trial (United States of America v. Karl Brandt et al.). Start date of December 9, 1946 and date decided of August 20, 1947]]
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[[Image:Courtroom_during_the_Doctors'_trial.jpg|thumb|350px|Courtroom of Palace of Justice (Nuremberg) during the Doctors' Trial (United States of America v. Karl Brandt et al.). Start date of December 9, 1946, and verdict of August 20, 1947]]
  
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The '''Doctors' Trial''' is the unofficial name for the particular [[Nuremberg Trial]] held before a U.S. military court for 23 [[Third Reich|Nazi]] medical doctors and officials accused of criminal [[human experimentation]] and mass murder under the guise of [[euthanasia]]. Its official name is United States of America v. Karl Brandt et al. The trial began on December 9, 1946, and concluded on August 20, 1947.
  
The '''doctors' trial''' (officially '''''United States of America v. [[Karl Brandt]], et al.''''') was the first of 12 trials for [[war crime]]s of high-ranking German officials and industrialists that the United States authorities held in their occupation zone in [[Nuremberg]], Germany, after the end of [[World War II]]. These trials were held before US military courts, not before the [[International Military Tribunal]], but took place in the same rooms at the [[Palace of Justice (Nuremberg)|Palace of Justice]]. The trials are collectively known as the "[[Subsequent Nuremberg trials]]", formally the "Trials of War Criminals before the Nuremberg Military Tribunals" (NMT).<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/index.php?ModuleId=10007035 |title=The Doctors Trial: The Medical Case of the Subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings |publisher=[[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]], Washington, D.C. |encyclopedia=Holocaust Encyclopedia}}</ref>
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The Doctor's Trial was one of a series of trials held in Nuremberg, [[Germany]] after [[World War II]] for individuals being charged as war criminals. The best known of these is the one held for major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal (IMT). However, twenty physicians and three officials who engaged in [[Nazi human experimentation]] and mass murder were also subject to a trial. This Doctors’ Trial was the first of 12 tribunals known as the "Subsequent Nuremberg Trials" for war crimes of high-ranking German officials and industrialists that the United States authorities held in their occupation zone in [[Nuremberg]], Germany, after the end of the war. These trials were held before U.S. military courts (U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunal or NMT), not before the International Military Tribunal, but took place in the same rooms at the Palace of Justice in Nuremberg. The Doctors' Trial was conducted under Control Council Law No. 10, with the indictment filed on October 25, 1946 and the trial lasting from December 9, 1946 to August 20, 1947.  
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Of the 23 defendants, seven were acquitted and seven received [[death sentence]]s; the remainder received [[prison]] sentences ranging from 10 years to life imprisonment.
  
After World War II, a series of trials were held in Nuremberg, [[Germany]] for individuals being charged as war criminals. The best known of these is the one held for major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal (IMT). However, the physicians who engaged in the notorious human experimentation were also subject to a trial, known as the “Doctors’ Trial.” This was held before an American military tribunal (U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunal or NMT) under Control Council Law No. 10. The Doctors’ Trial involved twenty-three defendants, most of whom were medical doctors and were being accused of criminal human experimentation. The trial began on December 9, 1946, and concluded on August 20, 1947.
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The Doctors' Trial catalogued some of the most heinous acts of [[torture]] conducted under the status of human experimentation. The Trial did lead to the [[Nuremberg Code]], a set of ethical standards for [[research with human subjects]], which played a pivotal role in the development of other ethical codes for researchers.
  
 
Twenty of the twenty-three defendants were medical doctors and were accused of having been involved in [[Nazi human experimentation]] and [[Aktion T4|mass murder under the guise of euthanasia]]. The [[indictment]] was filed on 25 October 1946; the trial lasted from 9 December that year until 20 August 1947. Of the 23 defendants, seven were acquitted and seven received death sentences; the remainder received prison sentences ranging from 10 years to life imprisonment.
 
 
==Historical overview==
 
==Historical overview==
Nazi Germany, or the [[Third Reich]], was the state between 1933 and 1945 when [[Adolf Hitler]] and the Nazi Party controlled the country. [[Racism]], Nazi eugenics, and [[antisemitism]] were central ideological features of the regime. Discrimination and the persecution of [[Jews]] and [[Romani people]] began in earnest after the seizure of power. The first Nazi concentration camps were established in March 1933. Jews and others deemed undesirable or who opposed Hitler's rule were imprisoned, killed, or exiled. More than 1,000 concentration camps (including subcamps) were established during the history of Nazi Germany and around 1.65 million people were registered prisoners in the camps at one point. Around a million died during their imprisonment.  
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Nazi Germany, or the [[Third Reich]], was the state between 1933 and 1945 when [[Adolf Hitler]] and the Nazi Party controlled the country. [[Racism]], Nazi eugenics, and [[antisemitism]] were central ideological features of the regime. Discrimination and the persecution of [[Jews]] and [[Romani people]] began in earnest after the seizure of power. The first Nazi [[concentration camp]]s were established in March 1933. Jews and others deemed undesirable or who opposed Hitler's rule were imprisoned, killed, or [[exile]]d. More than 1,000 concentration camps (including subcamps) were established during the history of Nazi Germany and around 1.65 million people were registered prisoners in the camps at one point. Around a million died during their imprisonment.  
  
 
During the Nazi control of Germany, many German physicians and their associates advanced a "race-based program of public health and genocide," conducted unethical medical experiments "to advance medical and racial science," and inflicted "unparalleled medical atrocities" (Weindling 2011). In his summary of "The Nazi Medical Experiments," Weindling (2011) noted that "physicians and medical and biological researchers took a central role in the implementation of the Holocaust and exploited imprisonment, ghettoization, and killings as opportunities for research," and demanded that "mental and physical disabilities be eradicated from the German/Aryan/Nordic race by compulsory sterilization, euthanasia, and segregation."
 
During the Nazi control of Germany, many German physicians and their associates advanced a "race-based program of public health and genocide," conducted unethical medical experiments "to advance medical and racial science," and inflicted "unparalleled medical atrocities" (Weindling 2011). In his summary of "The Nazi Medical Experiments," Weindling (2011) noted that "physicians and medical and biological researchers took a central role in the implementation of the Holocaust and exploited imprisonment, ghettoization, and killings as opportunities for research," and demanded that "mental and physical disabilities be eradicated from the German/Aryan/Nordic race by compulsory sterilization, euthanasia, and segregation."
  
[[Nazi human experimentation|Inhumane medical experiments]] were conducted on large numbers of prisoners, including children, by Nazi Germany in its concentration camps in the early to mid 1940s, during [[World War II]] and [[the Holocaust]]. Nazi physicians and their assistants forced concentration camp prisoners into participating in the medical experiments; they did not willingly volunteer and no consent was given for the procedures. In addition, physicians provided support for mass killings in the concentration camps by undertaking selections as to whom would be sent to the gas chambers. At [[Auschwitz concentration camp|Auschwitz]] and other camps, under the direction of Eduard Wirths, selected inmates were subjected to various experiments that were designed to help German military personnel in combat situations, develop new weapons, aid in the recovery of military personnel who had been injured, and to advance the Nazi racial ideology and [[eugenics]] (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 2006), including the twin experiments of [[Josef Mengele]] (Wachsmann 2015).  
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[[Nazi human experimentation|Inhumane medical experiments]] were conducted on large numbers of prisoners, including children, by Nazi Germany in its concentration camps in the early to mid 1940s, during [[World War II]] and [[the Holocaust]]. Nazi physicians and their assistants forced concentration camp prisoners into participating in the medical experiments; they did not willingly volunteer and no consent was given for the procedures. In addition, physicians provided support for mass killings in the concentration camps by undertaking selections as to whom would be sent to the [[gas chamber]]s. At [[Auschwitz concentration camp|Auschwitz]] and other camps, under the direction of Eduard Wirths, selected inmates were subjected to various experiments that were designed to help German military personnel in combat situations, develop new weapons, aid in the recovery of military personnel who had been injured, and to advance the Nazi racial ideology and [[eugenics]] (USHMM 2006), including the twin experiments of [[Josef Mengele]] (Wachsmann 2015).  
  
 
The Third Reich ended in May 1945 when the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] defeated Germany, ending [[World War II]] in Europe.
 
The Third Reich ended in May 1945 when the [[Allies of World War II|Allies]] defeated Germany, ending [[World War II]] in Europe.
  
After World War II, a series of trials were held in Nuremberg, [[Germany]] for individuals being charged as war criminals. The best known of these is the one held for major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal (IMT). However, there was also a subsequent trial, known as the “Doctors’ Trial,” held before an American military tribunal (U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunal or NMT) under Control Council Law No. 10. The Doctors’ Trial involved twenty-three defendants, most of whom were medical doctors and were being accused of criminal human experimentation and mass murder. The trial began on December 9, 1946, and concluded on August 20, 1947.
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[[Image:DoctorsTrialChart.jpg|thumb|400px|Chart showing hierarchy of those doctors and administrators accused of crimes in the Doctors' Trial]]
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After World War II, a series of trials were held in Nuremberg, [[Germany]] for individuals being charged as war criminals. One was held for major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal (IMT). Subsequent trials, including the one known as the “Doctors’ Trial,” were held before an American military tribunal (U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunal or NMT) under Control Council Law No. 10. The Doctors’ Trial involved twenty-three defendants, most of whom were medical doctors and were being accused of criminal human experimentation and mass murder. The trial began on December 9, 1946, and concluded on August 20, 1947.
  
 
One of the issues before the tribunal was what constituted acceptable medical experimentation involving human subjects. Some of the Nazi doctors argued that their experiments differed little from those conducted by American and German researchers in the past, and that there was no [[international law]] or even informal statements that differentiated illegal from legal human experimentation. Some  Nazi doctors defended themselves by claiming that at the time of their experiments there were no explicit regulations in Germany governing medical research on human beings (Vollmann and Winau 1996).  
 
One of the issues before the tribunal was what constituted acceptable medical experimentation involving human subjects. Some of the Nazi doctors argued that their experiments differed little from those conducted by American and German researchers in the past, and that there was no [[international law]] or even informal statements that differentiated illegal from legal human experimentation. Some  Nazi doctors defended themselves by claiming that at the time of their experiments there were no explicit regulations in Germany governing medical research on human beings (Vollmann and Winau 1996).  
  
However, as detailed in the article [[Nazi human experimentation#Ethical standards of German medical research pre-Nazi human experimentation|Ethical standards of German medical research pre-Nazi human experimentation]], there were both informal and formal codes of ethics relative to German medical research prior to the advent of Nazism. One example was the Reich Circular on Human Experimentation of February 28, 1931, which included such regulations as the following (Weindling 2011; Vollman and Winau 1996):
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However, as detailed in the section [[Nazi human experimentation#Ethical standards of German medical research pre-Nazi human experimentation|"Ethical standards of German medical research pre-Nazi human experimentation"]] of the article [[Nazi human experimentation]], there were both informal and formal codes of ethics relative to German medical research prior to the advent of Nazism. One example was the Reich Circular on Human Experimentation of February 28, 1931, which included such regulations as the following (Weindling 2011; Vollman and Winau 1996):
  
 
<blockquote>
 
<blockquote>
* Experimentation involving children or young persons under 18 years of age shall be prohibited if it in any ways endangers the child or young person
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* Experimentation involving children or young persons under 18 years of age shall be prohibited if it in any ways endangers the child or young person.
* Innovative therapy may be carried out only after the subject or his legal representative has unambiguously consented to the procedure in light of relevant information provided in advance  
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* Innovative therapy may be carried out only after the subject or his legal representative has unambiguously consented to the procedure in light of relevant information provided in advance.
 
* New therapy may be applied only if consent or proxy consent has been given in a clear and undebatable manner following appropriate information.  
 
* New therapy may be applied only if consent or proxy consent has been given in a clear and undebatable manner following appropriate information.  
 
* New therapy may be introduced without consent only if it is urgently required and cannot be postponed because of the need to save life or prevent severe damage to health.  
 
* New therapy may be introduced without consent only if it is urgently required and cannot be postponed because of the need to save life or prevent severe damage to health.  
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Based on their review of German policy, Vollman and Winau (1996) concluded the following:
 
Based on their review of German policy, Vollman and Winau (1996) concluded the following:
 
<blockquote>
 
<blockquote>
* Explicit directives concerned with the welfare of people subjected to medical experimentation in Germany were in place long before the Nuremberg code was devised in 1947.
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* Explicit directives concerned with the welfare of people subjected to medical experimentation in Germany were in place long before the Nuremberg Code was devised in 1947.
 
* We conclude that at the turn of the century informed consent was already a legal doctrine in medical experimentation in Germany, being based on "unambiguous consent" of the subject after "proper" information had been given by the doctor, including negative consequences and side effects.
 
* We conclude that at the turn of the century informed consent was already a legal doctrine in medical experimentation in Germany, being based on "unambiguous consent" of the subject after "proper" information had been given by the doctor, including negative consequences and side effects.
 
* Our primary objective was to show that the basic concept of informed consent was developed long before the second world war and before Nazi crimes in Germany, not on the initiative of the medical profession or research community but as a legal doctrine by government authorities. The guidelines of 1931 were not annulled in Nazi Germany, when unethical experiments were performed by German doctors in concentration camps.
 
* Our primary objective was to show that the basic concept of informed consent was developed long before the second world war and before Nazi crimes in Germany, not on the initiative of the medical profession or research community but as a legal doctrine by government authorities. The guidelines of 1931 were not annulled in Nazi Germany, when unethical experiments were performed by German doctors in concentration camps.
 
</blockquote>
 
</blockquote>
  
In addition, for the Doctors' Trial, the prosecution also produced a set of principles to demonstrate how the defendants' experiments had deviated from fundamental ethical principles that should govern research in civilized society. This [[Nuremberg Code]] was issued as part of the verdict issued in August 1947.
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In addition, for the Doctors' Trial, the prosecution also produced a set of principles to demonstrate how the defendants' experiments had deviated from fundamental ethical principles that should govern research in civilized society. This [[Nuremberg Code]] was presented as part of the verdict issued in August 1947.
  
In terms of the Doctors' Trial, twenty of the twenty-three defendants were medical doctors ([[Viktor Brack]], [[Rudolf Brandt]], and [[Wolfram Sievers]] were [[Nazi]] officials), and were accused of having been involved in [[Nazi human experimentation]] and mass murder under the guise of euthanasia. [[Josef Mengele]], one of the leading Nazi doctors, had evaded capture.
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In terms of the Doctors' Trial, twenty of the twenty-three defendants were medical doctors (Viktor Brack, Rudolf Brandt, and Wolfram Sievers were Nazi officials), and were accused of having been involved in [[Nazi human experimentation]] and mass murder under the guise of [[euthanasia]]. [[Josef Mengele]], one of the leading Nazi doctors, had evaded capture.
  
The judges, heard before Military Tribunal I, were [[Walter B. Beals]] (presiding judge) from [[Washington (state)|Washington]], [[Harold L. Sebring]] from [[Florida]], and [[Johnson T. Crawford]] from [[Oklahoma]], with [[Victor C. Swearingen]], a former special assistant to the [[Attorney General of the United States]], as an alternate judge. The Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution was [[Telford Taylor]] and the chief prosecutor was [[James M. McHaney]].
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The judges, heard before Military Tribunal I, were Walter B. Beals (presiding judge) from Washington state, Harold L. Sebring from Florida, and Johnson T. Crawford from [[Oklahoma]], with Victor C. Swearingen, a former special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, as an alternate judge. The Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution was Telford Taylor and the chief prosecutor was James M. McHaney.
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The trial included the testimony of 85 witnesses and about 1,500 documents were submitted (USHMM 2). On August 20, 2947 the American judges pronounced their verdict, with sixteen of the doctors/administrators found guilty and seven of these sentenced to death.
  
 
== Indictment ==
 
== Indictment ==
 
The accused faced four charges, including:
 
The accused faced four charges, including:
  
# Conspiracy to commit [[war crime]]s and [[crimes against humanity]] as described in counts 2 and 3;
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# Conspiracy to commit [[war crime]]s and crimes against humanity as described in counts 2 and 3;
# War crimes: performing medical experiments, without the subjects' consent, on [[prisoners of war]] and [[civilians]] of [[German-occupied Europe|occupied countries]], in the course of which experiments the defendants committed [[murder]]s, brutalities, cruelties, [[tortures]], atrocities, and other inhuman acts. Also planning and performing the [[mass murder]] of prisoners of war and civilians of occupied countries, stigmatized as aged, insane, incurably ill, deformed, and so on, by gas, lethal injections, and diverse other means in nursing homes, hospitals, and asylums during the [[Euthanasia Program]] and participating in the mass murder of [[concentration camp]] inmates.
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# War crimes: performing medical experiments, without the subjects' consent, on prisoners of war and civilians of German-occupied countries, in the course of which experiments the defendants committed [[murder]]s, brutalities, cruelties, tortures, atrocities, and other inhuman acts. Also planning and performing the mass murder of prisoners of war and civilians of occupied countries, stigmatized as aged, insane, incurably ill, deformed, and so on, by gas, lethal injections, and diverse other means in nursing homes, hospitals, and asylums during the Euthanasia Program and participating in the mass murder of [[concentration camp]] inmates.
 
# Crimes against humanity: committing crimes described under count 2 also on German nationals.
 
# Crimes against humanity: committing crimes described under count 2 also on German nationals.
# Membership in a criminal organization, the [[SS]].<ref name="ushmm/doctors">{{cite web |url=http://www.ushmm.org/research/doctors/index.html |title=The Doctors Trial |publisher=[[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]] |access-date=2007-10-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011204837/http://www.ushmm.org/research/doctors/index.html |archive-date=2007-10-11 |url-status=dead }} – Excerpts from the official trial record, opening and closing statements, and eyewitness testimony.</ref>
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# Membership in a criminal organization, the [[SS]] (USHMM).  
  
The tribunal largely dropped count 1, stating that the charge was beyond its jurisdiction.
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The tribunal largely dropped count 1, stating that the charge was beyond its jurisdiction.  
  
 
==Defendants, charges, and verdicts==
 
==Defendants, charges, and verdicts==
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!&nbsp;
 
!&nbsp;
 
|-
 
|-
| style="white-space:nowrap;"|[[Hermann Becker-Freyseng|Hermann&nbsp;Becker-Freyseng]]
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| style="white-space:nowrap;"|Hermann Becker-Freyseng
 
| [[File:Hermann Becker-Freyseng.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Hermann Becker-Freyseng.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Stabsarzt'' in the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' (Captain, Medical Service of the Air Force); and Chief of the Department for Aviation Medicine of the Chief of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe''
 
| ''Stabsarzt'' in the ''[[Luftwaffe]]'' (Captain, Medical Service of the Air Force); and Chief of the Department for Aviation Medicine of the Chief of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe''
 
| I|| G|| G|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| G|| G|| &nbsp;
| 20 years'&nbsp;imprisonment, [[Commutation of sentence|commuted]] to 10 years. Died 1961
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| 20 years'&nbsp;imprisonment, commuted to 10 years. Died 1961
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Wilhelm Beiglböck]]
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| Wilhelm Beiglböck
 
| [[File:Wilhelm Beiglboeck KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Wilhelm Beiglboeck KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| Consulting Physician to the ''Luftwaffe''
 
| Consulting Physician to the ''Luftwaffe''
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| 15 years' imprisonment, commuted to 10 years. Died 1963
 
| 15 years' imprisonment, commuted to 10 years. Died 1963
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Kurt Blome]]
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| Kurt Blome
 
| [[File:Kurt Blome KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Kurt Blome KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| Deputy [of the] ''Reich'' Health Leader (''Reichsgesundheitsführer''); and Plenipotentiary for Cancer Research in the ''Reich'' Research Council
 
| Deputy [of the] ''Reich'' Health Leader (''Reichsgesundheitsführer''); and Plenipotentiary for Cancer Research in the ''Reich'' Research Council
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
| [[Acquittal|Acquitted]]. Died 1969
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| Acquitted. Died 1969
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Viktor Brack]]
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| Viktor Brack
 
| [[File:Viktor Brack Nürnberg 2.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Viktor Brack Nürnberg 2.jpg|75px]]
| ''[[Oberführer]]'' (Senior Colonel) in the [[SS]] and ''Sturmbannführer'' (Major) in the [[Waffen SS|''Waffen'' SS]]; and Chief Administrative Officer in the Chancellery of the ''Führer'' of the [[NSDAP]] (''Oberdienstleiter, Kanzlei des Führers der NSDAP'')
+
| ''Oberführer'' (Senior Colonel) in the [[SS]] and ''Sturmbannführer'' (Major) in the ''Waffen'' SS; and Chief Administrative Officer in the Chancellery of the ''Führer'' of the NSDAP (''Oberdienstleiter, Kanzlei des Führers der NSDAP'')
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
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| [[Karl Brandt]]
 
| [[Karl Brandt]]
 
| [[File:Karl Brandt SS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Karl Brandt SS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
| Personal physician to Adolf Hitler; ''[[Gruppenführer]]'' in the SS and ''[[Generalleutnant]]'' (Lieutenant General) in the Waffen SS; ''Reich'' Commissioner for Health and Sanitation (''Reichskommissar für Sanitäts und Gesundheitswesen''); and member of the ''Reich'' Research Council (''[[Reichsforschungsrat]]'')
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| Personal physician to Adolf Hitler; ''Gruppenführer'' in the SS and ''Generalleutnant'' (Lieutenant General) in the Waffen SS; ''Reich'' Commissioner for Health and Sanitation (''Reichskommissar für Sanitäts und Gesundheitswesen''); and member of the ''Reich'' Research Council (''Reichsforschungsrat'')
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Rudolf Brandt]]
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| Rudolf Brandt
 
| [[File:Rudolf Brandt (SS-Mitglied).jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Rudolf Brandt (SS-Mitglied).jpg|75px]]
| ''[[Standartenführer]]'' (Colonel); in the [[Allgemeine SS|''Allgemeine'' SS]]; Personal Administrative Officer to [[Reichsführer-SS|''Reichsführer''-SS]] [[Heinrich Himmler|Himmler]] (''Persönlicher Referent von Himmler''); and Ministerial Counselor and Chief of the Ministerial Office in the ''Reich'' Ministry of the Interior
+
| ''Standartenführer'' (Colonel); in the ''Allgemeine'' SS; Personal Administrative Officer to [[Reichsführer-SS|''Reichsführer''-SS]] [[Heinrich Himmler|Himmler]] (''Persönlicher Referent von Himmler''); and Ministerial Counselor and Chief of the Ministerial Office in the ''Reich'' Ministry of the Interior
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Fritz Fischer (medical doctor)|Fritz Fischer]]
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| Fritz Fischer
 
| [[File:Fritz Fischer KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Fritz Fischer KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
| ''[[Sturmbannführer]]'' (Major) in the ''Waffen'' SS; and Assistant Physician to the defendant Gebhardt at the hospital at Hohenlychen
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| ''Sturmbannführer'' (Major) in the ''Waffen'' SS; and Assistant Physician to the defendant Gebhardt at the hospital at Hohenlychen
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 15 years. Released 1954, died 2003
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 15 years. Released 1954, died 2003
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Karl Gebhardt]]
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| Karl Gebhardt
 
| [[File:Karl Gebhardt, SS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Karl Gebhardt, SS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Gruppenführer'' in the SS and ''Generalleutnant'' (Lieutenant General) in the ''Waffen'' SS; personal physician to ''Reichsfuehrer''-SS Himmler; Chief Surgeon of the Staff of the ''Reich'' Physician SS and Police (''Oberster Kliniker, Reichsarzt SS und Polizei''); and President of the German Red Cross
 
| ''Gruppenführer'' in the SS and ''Generalleutnant'' (Lieutenant General) in the ''Waffen'' SS; personal physician to ''Reichsfuehrer''-SS Himmler; Chief Surgeon of the Staff of the ''Reich'' Physician SS and Police (''Oberster Kliniker, Reichsarzt SS und Polizei''); and President of the German Red Cross
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| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Karl Genzken]]
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| Karl Genzken
 
| [[File:Karl August Genzken KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Karl August Genzken KZ-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Gruppenführer'' in the SS and ''Generalleutnant'' (Lieutenant General) in the ''Waffen'' SS; and Chief of the Medical Department of the ''Waffen'' SS (''Chef des Sanitätsamts der Waffen'' SS)
 
| ''Gruppenführer'' in the SS and ''Generalleutnant'' (Lieutenant General) in the ''Waffen'' SS; and Chief of the Medical Department of the ''Waffen'' SS (''Chef des Sanitätsamts der Waffen'' SS)
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| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released 1954, died 1957
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released 1954, died 1957
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Siegfried Handloser]]
+
| Siegfried Handloser
 
| [[File:Siegfried Handloser NS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Siegfried Handloser NS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Generaloberstabsarzt'' (Lieutenant General, Medical Service); Medical Inspector of the Army (''Heeressanitätsinspekteur''); and Chief of the Medical Services of the Armed Forces (''Chef des Wehrmachtsanitätswesens'')
 
| ''Generaloberstabsarzt'' (Lieutenant General, Medical Service); Medical Inspector of the Army (''Heeressanitätsinspekteur''); and Chief of the Medical Services of the Armed Forces (''Chef des Wehrmachtsanitätswesens'')
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| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released/died 1954
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released/died 1954
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Waldemar Hoven]]
+
| Waldemar Hoven
 
| [[File:Waldem Hoven.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Waldem Hoven.jpg|75px]]
| ''[[Hauptsturmführer]]'' (Captain) in the ''Waffen'' SS; and Chief Doctor of the [[Buchenwald concentration camp]]
+
| ''Hauptsturmführer'' (Captain) in the ''Waffen'' SS; and Chief Doctor of the [[Buchenwald concentration camp]]
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Joachim Mrugowsky]]
+
| Joachim Mrugowsky
 
| [[File:Joachim Mrugoswsky SS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Joachim Mrugoswsky SS-Arzt.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Oberführer'' (Senior Colonel) in the ''Waffen'' SS; Chief Hygienist of the ''Reich'' Physician SS and Police (''Oberster Hygieniker, Reichsarzt SS und Polizei''); and Chief of the Hygienic Institute of the ''Waffen'' SS (''Chef des Hygienischen Institutes der Waffen SS'')
 
| ''Oberführer'' (Senior Colonel) in the ''Waffen'' SS; Chief Hygienist of the ''Reich'' Physician SS and Police (''Oberster Hygieniker, Reichsarzt SS und Polizei''); and Chief of the Hygienic Institute of the ''Waffen'' SS (''Chef des Hygienischen Institutes der Waffen SS'')
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| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Herta Oberheuser]]
+
| Herta Oberheuser
 
| [[File:Herta Oberheuser.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Herta Oberheuser.jpg|75px]]
 
| Physician at the [[Ravensbrück concentration camp]]; and Assistant Physician to the defendant Gebhardt at the hospital at Hohenlychen
 
| Physician at the [[Ravensbrück concentration camp]]; and Assistant Physician to the defendant Gebhardt at the hospital at Hohenlychen
Line 149: Line 154:
 
| 20 years' imprisonment, commuted to 5 years. Released 1952, died 1978
 
| 20 years' imprisonment, commuted to 5 years. Released 1952, died 1978
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Adolf Pokorny]]
+
| Adolf Pokorny
 
| [[File:Adolf Pokorny.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Adolf Pokorny.jpg|75px]]
 
| Physician, Specialist in Skin and Venereal Diseases
 
| Physician, Specialist in Skin and Venereal Diseases
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
| [[Acquittal|Acquitted]]
+
| Acquitted
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Helmut Poppendick]]
+
| Helmut Poppendick
 
| [[File:Helmut Poppendick.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Helmut Poppendick.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Oberführer'' (Senior Colonel) in the SS; and Chief of the Personal Staff of the ''Reich'' Physician SS and Police (''Chef des Persönlichen Stabes des Reichsarztes SS und Polizei'')
 
| ''Oberführer'' (Senior Colonel) in the SS; and Chief of the Personal Staff of the ''Reich'' Physician SS and Police (''Chef des Persönlichen Stabes des Reichsarztes SS und Polizei'')
Line 161: Line 166:
 
| 10 years imprisonment. Released 1951, died 1994
 
| 10 years imprisonment. Released 1951, died 1994
 
|-
 
|-
| {{Interlanguage link multi|Hans-Wolfgang Romberg|de}}
+
| Hans-Wolfgang Romberg
 
| [[File:Wolfgang Romberg.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Wolfgang Romberg.jpg|75px]]
 
| Doctor on the Staff of the Department for Aviation Medicine at the German Experimental Institute for Aviation
 
| Doctor on the Staff of the Department for Aviation Medicine at the German Experimental Institute for Aviation
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
| [[Acquittal|Acquitted]]. Died 1981
+
| Acquitted. Died 1981
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Gerhard Rose]]
+
| Gerhard Rose
 
| [[File:Gerhard Rose.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Gerhard Rose.jpg|75px]]
| ''Generalarzt'' of the ''Luftwaffe'' (Major General<!--See [[Generalarzt#Comparative military ranks]]—>, Medical Service of the Air Force); Vice President, Chief of the Department for Tropical Medicine, and Professor of the Robert Koch Institute; and Hygienic Adviser for Tropical Medicine to the Chief of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe''
+
| ''Generalarzt'' of the ''Luftwaffe'' (Major General, Medical Service of the Air Force); Vice President, Chief of the Department for Tropical Medicine, and Professor of the Robert Koch Institute; and Hygienic Adviser for Tropical Medicine to the Chief of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe''
 
| I|| G|| G|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| G|| G|| &nbsp;
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released 1955, died 1992
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released 1955, died 1992
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Paul Rostock]]
+
| Paul Rostock
 
| [[File:Paul Rostock (NS-Mediziner).jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Paul Rostock (NS-Mediziner).jpg|75px]]
 
| Chief Surgeon of the Surgical Clinic in Berlin; Surgical Adviser to the Army; and Chief of the Office for Medical Science and Research (''Amtschef der Dienststelle Medizinische Wissenschaft und Forschung'') under the defendant Karl Brandt, ''Reich'' Commissioner for Health and Sanitation
 
| Chief Surgeon of the Surgical Clinic in Berlin; Surgical Adviser to the Army; and Chief of the Office for Medical Science and Research (''Amtschef der Dienststelle Medizinische Wissenschaft und Forschung'') under the defendant Karl Brandt, ''Reich'' Commissioner for Health and Sanitation
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
| [[Acquittal|Acquitted]]. Died 1956
+
| Acquitted. Died 1956
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Siegfried Ruff]]
+
| Siegfried Ruff
 
| [[File:Siegfr Ruff.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Siegfr Ruff.jpg|75px]]
| Director of the Department for Aviation Medicine at the German Experimental Institute for Aviation (''Deutsche Versuchsanstalt für Luftfahrt'') and First Lieutenant in the Medical Service of the Air Force; still researching and publishing in the field of aviation as late as 1989<ref>Ruff, Siegfried, et al. ''Sicherheit und Rettung in der Luftfahrt''. Koblenz : Bernard & Graefe, c1989.</ref>
+
| Director of the Department for Aviation Medicine at the German Experimental Institute for Aviation (''Deutsche Versuchsanstalt für Luftfahrt'') and First Lieutenant in the Medical Service of the Air Force; still researching and publishing in the field of aviation as late as 1989 (Ruff et al. 1989).  
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
| [[Acquittal|Acquitted]]. Died 1989
+
| Acquitted. Died 1989
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Konrad Schäfer]]
+
| Konrad Schäfer
 
| [[File:Konrad Schaefer.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Konrad Schaefer.jpg|75px]]
 
| Doctor on the Staff of the Institute for Aviation Medicine in Berlin
 
| Doctor on the Staff of the Institute for Aviation Medicine in Berlin
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
| [[Acquittal|Acquitted]]
+
| Acquitted
 
|-
 
|-
| {{Interlanguage link multi|Oskar Schröder|de}}
+
| Oskar Schröder
 
| [[File:Oskar Schroeder.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Oskar Schroeder.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Generaloberstabsarzt'' (Colonel General Medical Service); Chief of Staff of the Inspectorate of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe'' (''Chef des Stabes, Inspekteur des Luftwaffe-Sanitätswesens''); and Chief of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe'' (''Chef des Sanitätswesens der Luftwaffe'')
 
| ''Generaloberstabsarzt'' (Colonel General Medical Service); Chief of Staff of the Inspectorate of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe'' (''Chef des Stabes, Inspekteur des Luftwaffe-Sanitätswesens''); and Chief of the Medical Service of the ''Luftwaffe'' (''Chef des Sanitätswesens der Luftwaffe'')
Line 197: Line 202:
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 15 years. Released 1954, died 1958
 
| Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 15 years. Released 1954, died 1958
 
|-
 
|-
| [[Wolfram Sievers]]
+
| Wolfram Sievers
 
| [[File:Wolfram Sievers.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Wolfram Sievers.jpg|75px]]
| ''Standartenführer'' (Colonel) in the SS; ''Reich'' Manager of the ''[[Ahnenerbe]]'' Society and Director of its [[Institute for Military Scientific Research]] (''Institut für Wehrwissenschaftliche Zweckforschung''); and Deputy Chairman of the Managing Board of Directors of the [[Reich Research Council|''Reich'' Research Council]]
+
| ''Standartenführer'' (Colonel) in the SS; ''Reich'' Manager of the ''Ahnenerbe'' Society and Director of its Institute for Military Scientific Research (''Institut für Wehrwissenschaftliche Zweckforschung''); and Deputy Chairman of the Managing Board of Directors of the ''Reich'' Research Council
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| I|| G|| G|| G
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
| Death, executed 2 June 1948.
 
|-
 
|-
| {{Interlanguage link multi|Georg August Weltz|de}}
+
| Georg August Weltz
 
| [[File:Georg Weltz.jpg|75px]]
 
| [[File:Georg Weltz.jpg|75px]]
 
| ''Oberfeldarzt'' in the ''Luftwaffe'' (Lieutenant Colonel, Medical Service, of the Air Force); and Chief of the Institute for Aviation Medicine in Munich
 
| ''Oberfeldarzt'' in the ''Luftwaffe'' (Lieutenant Colonel, Medical Service, of the Air Force); and Chief of the Institute for Aviation Medicine in Munich
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
 
| I|| I|| I|| &nbsp;
| [[Acquittal|Acquitted]]
+
| Acquitted
 
|}
 
|}
 +
==Outcomes==
 +
 +
===Death Sentences===
 +
 +
All of the seven criminals sentenced to death were hanged on June 2, 1948, in Landsberg prison, [[Bavaria]].
 +
 +
===Imprisonments===
 +
 +
The nine doctors/administrator found guilty were sentenced to between ten years in prison and life imprisonment. However, the sentences of these defendants were reduced during the appeal process. Handloser and Genzken, who had been sentenced to life imprisonment, had their sentences commuted (substitution of a lesser penalty after a conviction) to 20 years. Schroder, Rose, and Fischer, who had been sentenced to life imprisonment, had their sentences commuted to 15 years. (Rose's sentence was reduced on January 31, 1951, by the American High Commissioner John J. McCloy.) Becker-Freyseng, who had been sentenced to 20 years, and Beiglböck who had been sentenced to fifteen years, had their sentences commuted to ten years. Oberheuserm who had been sentenced to twenty years, had her sentence commuted to ten years and was released after five years, in April 1952, for good behavior. Poppendick, who had been acquitted from being criminally implicated in medical experiments, but was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for membership in a criminal organization (SS) was released on January 31, 1951 (USHMM 3).
  
All of the criminals sentenced to death were [[hanged]] on 2 June 1948 in [[Landsberg prison]], [[Bavaria]].
+
Wilhelm Beiglböck, Fritz Fischer, and Herta Oberheuser were able to resume their careers after release from prison. From 1952 to 1963, Beiglböck served as the chief physician at the Hospital of Buxtehude. Fischer started a new career at the chemical company Boehringer in Ingelheim, after regaining his license to practice medicine. Oberheuser became a family doctor in Stocksee, near Kiel, in West Germany. However, she lost her position in August 1958 after being recognized by a Ravensbrück survivor and the interior minister of Schleswig-Holstein, Helmut Lemke, revoked her medical license and shut down her practice.
  
For some, the difference between receiving a prison term and the death sentence was membership in the SS, "an organization declared criminal by the judgement of the International Military Tribunal". However, some SS medical personnel received prison sentences. The degree of personal involvement and/or presiding over groups involved was a factor in others.{{cn|date=May 2021}}
+
===Acquitted===
 +
Among those acquitted, it was  generally accepted that Kurt Blome actually had participated in chemical and biological warfare experiments on concentration camp inmates, but was saved by American intervention in exchange for information about biological warfare, nerve gas, and providing advice to the American chemical and biological weapons programs.
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
Line 226: Line 241:
 
==References==
 
==References==
  
* United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 2006. [https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/nazi-medical-experiments Nazi medical experiments]. Washington, D.C: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved October 5, 2021.
+
* Ruff, Siegfried, Martin Ruck, and Gerhard Sedlmayr. 1989. ''Sicherheit und Rettung in der Luftfahrt''. Koblenz: Verlag Bernard & Graefe.
 +
 
 +
* United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). n.d. [https://web.archive.org/web/20071011204837/http://www.ushmm.org/research/doctors/index.html The Doctors' Trial]. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  
* Wachsmann, Nikolaus. 2015. ''A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps''. New York, NY: Farrar Straus & Giroux. ISBN 978-0374118259.
+
* United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). n.d.2. [https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/the-doctors-trial-the-medical-case-of-the-subsequent-nuremberg-proceedings The Doctors Trial: The medical case of the subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings]. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
 +
 
 +
* United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). n.d.3. [https://www.ushmm.org/information/exhibitions/online-exhibitions/special-focus/doctors-trial/sentences Sentences]. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
  
* Weindling, Paul J. 2011. The Nazi Medical Experiments. Chapter 2, pages 18-30 in Ezekiel J. Emanuel, Christine C. Grady, Robert A. Crouch, Reidar k. Lie, Franklin G. Miller, and David D Wendler (Eds.), ''The Oxford Textbook of Clinical Research Ethics''. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199768639.
+
* United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). 2006. [https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/nazi-medical-experiments Nazi medical experiments]. Washington, D.C: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved October 5, 2021.
  
 +
* Vollman, J., and R. Winau. 1996. [https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8973233/ Informed consent in human experimentation before the Nuremberg code]. ''British Medical Journal'' 313(7070): 1445-9. Retrieved October 12, 2021.
  
{{Reflist}}
+
* Wachsmann, Nikolaus. 2015. ''A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps''. New York, NY: Farrar Straus & Giroux. ISBN 978-0374118259.
  
==Further reading==
+
* Weindling, Paul J. 2011. The Nazi Medical Experiments. Chapter 2, pages 18-30 in Ezekiel J. Emanuel, Christine C. Grady, Robert A. Crouch, Reidar k. Lie, Franklin G. Miller, and David D Wendler (Eds.), ''The Oxford Textbook of Clinical Research Ethics''. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199768639.
* {{cite journal |last=Hanauske-Abel |first=H. |year=1996 |title=Not a slippery slope or sudden subversion: German medicine and National Socialism in 1933 |journal=[[British Medical Journal]] |volume=313 |issue=7070 |pages=1453–1463 |pmid=8973235 |issn=0959-8138 |pmc=2352969 |doi=10.1136/bmj.313.7070.1453}}{{subscription required |date=September 2012}}
 
* {{cite book|last=Heller |first= Kevin Jon |year=2011 |title=The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International Criminal Law |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-955431-7}}
 
* {{cite book |last=Lifton-Robert |first=Robert J. |year=2000 |title=The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide |isbn=978-0-465-04905-9 |publisher=Basic Books |orig-year=1st. Pub. 1986 London:Macmillan |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/nazidoctorsmedic0000lift }}
 
* {{cite journal |last=Pellegrino |first=E. |s2cid=30547329 |title=The Nazi Doctors and Nuremberg: Some Moral Lessons Revisited |journal= Annals of Internal Medicine|date=15 August 1997 |volume=127 |issue=4 |pages=307–308 |pmid=9265432 |doi=10.7326/0003-4819-127-4-199708150-00010 |citeseerx=10.1.1.694.9894 }}{{subscription required |date=September 2012}}
 
* {{cite journal |last=Seidelman |first=W. |year=1996 |title=Nuremberg lamentation: for the forgotten victims of medical science |journal=[[British Medical Journal]] |volume=313 |pages=1463–1467 |pmid=8973236 |issn=0959-8138 |issue=7070 |pmc=2352986 |doi=10.1136/bmj.313.7070.1463}}{{subscription required |date=September 2012}}
 
* {{cite book |last=Spitz |first=Vivien |title=Doctors from Hell |year=2005 |publisher=Sentient Publications |isbn=978-1-59181-032-2 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/doctorsfromhellh00spit }}
 
* {{cite book |last=Weindling |first=P.J. |year=2005 |title=Nazi Medicine and the Nuremberg Trials: From Medical War Crimes to Informed Consent |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-1-4039-3911-1}}
 
  
==External links==
 
{{Commons category|Doctors' Trial}}
 
* {{cite web |url=http://nuremberg.law.harvard.edu/NurTranscript/TranscriptSearches/tran_about.php |publisher=Harvard Law School Library |work=The Nuremberg Trials Project |title=Transcripts |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110415082417/http://nuremberg.law.harvard.edu/NurTranscript/TranscriptSearches/tran_about.php |archive-date=2011-04-15 }} – Partial transcript from the trial
 
* {{cite web |url=http://www.jlaw.com/Articles/NaziMedEx.html |title=The Ethics Of Using Medical Data From Nazi Experiments |first=Baruch C. |last=Cohen |publisher=Jewish Law}}
 
* {{cite journal |last=Biddiss |first=M |date=June 1997 |title=Disease and dictatorship: the case of Hitler's Reich |format=pdf |url=http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=1296317&blobtype=pdf |pmc=1296317 |journal= Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine|volume=90 |issue=6 |pages=342–346 |pmid=9227388|doi=10.1177/014107689709000616 }}
 
  
{{credit|1023076684}}
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{{credit|Doctors'_trial|1023076684|Herta_Oberheuser|1047453314|Fritz_Fischer_(medical_doctor)|1044976565|Wilhelm_Beiglböck|1053767639|Kurt_Blome|1043560317}}
 +
[[Category:History]]
 +
[[Category:Law]]
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[[Category:Life sciences]]

Latest revision as of 16:13, 11 November 2021

Courtroom of Palace of Justice (Nuremberg) during the Doctors' Trial (United States of America v. Karl Brandt et al.). Start date of December 9, 1946, and verdict of August 20, 1947

The Doctors' Trial is the unofficial name for the particular Nuremberg Trial held before a U.S. military court for 23 Nazi medical doctors and officials accused of criminal human experimentation and mass murder under the guise of euthanasia. Its official name is United States of America v. Karl Brandt et al. The trial began on December 9, 1946, and concluded on August 20, 1947.

The Doctor's Trial was one of a series of trials held in Nuremberg, Germany after World War II for individuals being charged as war criminals. The best known of these is the one held for major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal (IMT). However, twenty physicians and three officials who engaged in Nazi human experimentation and mass murder were also subject to a trial. This Doctors’ Trial was the first of 12 tribunals known as the "Subsequent Nuremberg Trials" for war crimes of high-ranking German officials and industrialists that the United States authorities held in their occupation zone in Nuremberg, Germany, after the end of the war. These trials were held before U.S. military courts (U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunal or NMT), not before the International Military Tribunal, but took place in the same rooms at the Palace of Justice in Nuremberg. The Doctors' Trial was conducted under Control Council Law No. 10, with the indictment filed on October 25, 1946 and the trial lasting from December 9, 1946 to August 20, 1947.

Of the 23 defendants, seven were acquitted and seven received death sentences; the remainder received prison sentences ranging from 10 years to life imprisonment.

The Doctors' Trial catalogued some of the most heinous acts of torture conducted under the status of human experimentation. The Trial did lead to the Nuremberg Code, a set of ethical standards for research with human subjects, which played a pivotal role in the development of other ethical codes for researchers.

Historical overview

Nazi Germany, or the Third Reich, was the state between 1933 and 1945 when Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party controlled the country. Racism, Nazi eugenics, and antisemitism were central ideological features of the regime. Discrimination and the persecution of Jews and Romani people began in earnest after the seizure of power. The first Nazi concentration camps were established in March 1933. Jews and others deemed undesirable or who opposed Hitler's rule were imprisoned, killed, or exiled. More than 1,000 concentration camps (including subcamps) were established during the history of Nazi Germany and around 1.65 million people were registered prisoners in the camps at one point. Around a million died during their imprisonment.

During the Nazi control of Germany, many German physicians and their associates advanced a "race-based program of public health and genocide," conducted unethical medical experiments "to advance medical and racial science," and inflicted "unparalleled medical atrocities" (Weindling 2011). In his summary of "The Nazi Medical Experiments," Weindling (2011) noted that "physicians and medical and biological researchers took a central role in the implementation of the Holocaust and exploited imprisonment, ghettoization, and killings as opportunities for research," and demanded that "mental and physical disabilities be eradicated from the German/Aryan/Nordic race by compulsory sterilization, euthanasia, and segregation."

Inhumane medical experiments were conducted on large numbers of prisoners, including children, by Nazi Germany in its concentration camps in the early to mid 1940s, during World War II and the Holocaust. Nazi physicians and their assistants forced concentration camp prisoners into participating in the medical experiments; they did not willingly volunteer and no consent was given for the procedures. In addition, physicians provided support for mass killings in the concentration camps by undertaking selections as to whom would be sent to the gas chambers. At Auschwitz and other camps, under the direction of Eduard Wirths, selected inmates were subjected to various experiments that were designed to help German military personnel in combat situations, develop new weapons, aid in the recovery of military personnel who had been injured, and to advance the Nazi racial ideology and eugenics (USHMM 2006), including the twin experiments of Josef Mengele (Wachsmann 2015).

The Third Reich ended in May 1945 when the Allies defeated Germany, ending World War II in Europe.

Chart showing hierarchy of those doctors and administrators accused of crimes in the Doctors' Trial

After World War II, a series of trials were held in Nuremberg, Germany for individuals being charged as war criminals. One was held for major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal (IMT). Subsequent trials, including the one known as the “Doctors’ Trial,” were held before an American military tribunal (U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunal or NMT) under Control Council Law No. 10. The Doctors’ Trial involved twenty-three defendants, most of whom were medical doctors and were being accused of criminal human experimentation and mass murder. The trial began on December 9, 1946, and concluded on August 20, 1947.

One of the issues before the tribunal was what constituted acceptable medical experimentation involving human subjects. Some of the Nazi doctors argued that their experiments differed little from those conducted by American and German researchers in the past, and that there was no international law or even informal statements that differentiated illegal from legal human experimentation. Some Nazi doctors defended themselves by claiming that at the time of their experiments there were no explicit regulations in Germany governing medical research on human beings (Vollmann and Winau 1996).

However, as detailed in the section "Ethical standards of German medical research pre-Nazi human experimentation" of the article Nazi human experimentation, there were both informal and formal codes of ethics relative to German medical research prior to the advent of Nazism. One example was the Reich Circular on Human Experimentation of February 28, 1931, which included such regulations as the following (Weindling 2011; Vollman and Winau 1996):

  • Experimentation involving children or young persons under 18 years of age shall be prohibited if it in any ways endangers the child or young person.
  • Innovative therapy may be carried out only after the subject or his legal representative has unambiguously consented to the procedure in light of relevant information provided in advance.
  • New therapy may be applied only if consent or proxy consent has been given in a clear and undebatable manner following appropriate information.
  • New therapy may be introduced without consent only if it is urgently required and cannot be postponed because of the need to save life or prevent severe damage to health.
  • [Non-therapeutic research was] under no circumstances permissible without consent.

Based on their review of German policy, Vollman and Winau (1996) concluded the following:

  • Explicit directives concerned with the welfare of people subjected to medical experimentation in Germany were in place long before the Nuremberg Code was devised in 1947.
  • We conclude that at the turn of the century informed consent was already a legal doctrine in medical experimentation in Germany, being based on "unambiguous consent" of the subject after "proper" information had been given by the doctor, including negative consequences and side effects.
  • Our primary objective was to show that the basic concept of informed consent was developed long before the second world war and before Nazi crimes in Germany, not on the initiative of the medical profession or research community but as a legal doctrine by government authorities. The guidelines of 1931 were not annulled in Nazi Germany, when unethical experiments were performed by German doctors in concentration camps.

In addition, for the Doctors' Trial, the prosecution also produced a set of principles to demonstrate how the defendants' experiments had deviated from fundamental ethical principles that should govern research in civilized society. This Nuremberg Code was presented as part of the verdict issued in August 1947.

In terms of the Doctors' Trial, twenty of the twenty-three defendants were medical doctors (Viktor Brack, Rudolf Brandt, and Wolfram Sievers were Nazi officials), and were accused of having been involved in Nazi human experimentation and mass murder under the guise of euthanasia. Josef Mengele, one of the leading Nazi doctors, had evaded capture.

The judges, heard before Military Tribunal I, were Walter B. Beals (presiding judge) from Washington state, Harold L. Sebring from Florida, and Johnson T. Crawford from Oklahoma, with Victor C. Swearingen, a former special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, as an alternate judge. The Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution was Telford Taylor and the chief prosecutor was James M. McHaney.

The trial included the testimony of 85 witnesses and about 1,500 documents were submitted (USHMM 2). On August 20, 2947 the American judges pronounced their verdict, with sixteen of the doctors/administrators found guilty and seven of these sentenced to death.

Indictment

The accused faced four charges, including:

  1. Conspiracy to commit war crimes and crimes against humanity as described in counts 2 and 3;
  2. War crimes: performing medical experiments, without the subjects' consent, on prisoners of war and civilians of German-occupied countries, in the course of which experiments the defendants committed murders, brutalities, cruelties, tortures, atrocities, and other inhuman acts. Also planning and performing the mass murder of prisoners of war and civilians of occupied countries, stigmatized as aged, insane, incurably ill, deformed, and so on, by gas, lethal injections, and diverse other means in nursing homes, hospitals, and asylums during the Euthanasia Program and participating in the mass murder of concentration camp inmates.
  3. Crimes against humanity: committing crimes described under count 2 also on German nationals.
  4. Membership in a criminal organization, the SS (USHMM).

The tribunal largely dropped count 1, stating that the charge was beyond its jurisdiction.

Defendants, charges, and verdicts

I — Indicted   G — Indicted and found guilty

Defendants, functions, verdicts, and fates
Name Photograph Function Charges Verdict and sentence
    1 2 3 4  
Hermann Becker-Freyseng Hermann Becker-Freyseng.jpg Stabsarzt in the Luftwaffe (Captain, Medical Service of the Air Force); and Chief of the Department for Aviation Medicine of the Chief of the Medical Service of the Luftwaffe I G G   20 years' imprisonment, commuted to 10 years. Died 1961
Wilhelm Beiglböck Wilhelm Beiglboeck KZ-Arzt.jpg Consulting Physician to the Luftwaffe I G G   15 years' imprisonment, commuted to 10 years. Died 1963
Kurt Blome Kurt Blome KZ-Arzt.jpg Deputy [of the] Reich Health Leader (Reichsgesundheitsführer); and Plenipotentiary for Cancer Research in the Reich Research Council I I I   Acquitted. Died 1969
Viktor Brack Viktor Brack Nürnberg 2.jpg Oberführer (Senior Colonel) in the SS and Sturmbannführer (Major) in the Waffen SS; and Chief Administrative Officer in the Chancellery of the Führer of the NSDAP (Oberdienstleiter, Kanzlei des Führers der NSDAP) I G G G Death, executed 2 June 1948.
Karl Brandt Karl Brandt SS-Arzt.jpg Personal physician to Adolf Hitler; Gruppenführer in the SS and Generalleutnant (Lieutenant General) in the Waffen SS; Reich Commissioner for Health and Sanitation (Reichskommissar für Sanitäts und Gesundheitswesen); and member of the Reich Research Council (Reichsforschungsrat) I G G G Death, executed 2 June 1948.
Rudolf Brandt Rudolf Brandt (SS-Mitglied).jpg Standartenführer (Colonel); in the Allgemeine SS; Personal Administrative Officer to Reichsführer-SS Himmler (Persönlicher Referent von Himmler); and Ministerial Counselor and Chief of the Ministerial Office in the Reich Ministry of the Interior I G G G Death, executed 2 June 1948.
Fritz Fischer Fritz Fischer KZ-Arzt.jpg Sturmbannführer (Major) in the Waffen SS; and Assistant Physician to the defendant Gebhardt at the hospital at Hohenlychen I G G G Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 15 years. Released 1954, died 2003
Karl Gebhardt Karl Gebhardt, SS-Arzt.jpg Gruppenführer in the SS and Generalleutnant (Lieutenant General) in the Waffen SS; personal physician to Reichsfuehrer-SS Himmler; Chief Surgeon of the Staff of the Reich Physician SS and Police (Oberster Kliniker, Reichsarzt SS und Polizei); and President of the German Red Cross I G G G Death, executed 2 June 1948.
Karl Genzken Karl August Genzken KZ-Arzt.jpg Gruppenführer in the SS and Generalleutnant (Lieutenant General) in the Waffen SS; and Chief of the Medical Department of the Waffen SS (Chef des Sanitätsamts der Waffen SS) I G G G Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released 1954, died 1957
Siegfried Handloser Siegfried Handloser NS-Arzt.jpg Generaloberstabsarzt (Lieutenant General, Medical Service); Medical Inspector of the Army (Heeressanitätsinspekteur); and Chief of the Medical Services of the Armed Forces (Chef des Wehrmachtsanitätswesens) I G G   Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released/died 1954
Waldemar Hoven Waldem Hoven.jpg Hauptsturmführer (Captain) in the Waffen SS; and Chief Doctor of the Buchenwald concentration camp I G G G Death, executed 2 June 1948.
Joachim Mrugowsky Joachim Mrugoswsky SS-Arzt.jpg Oberführer (Senior Colonel) in the Waffen SS; Chief Hygienist of the Reich Physician SS and Police (Oberster Hygieniker, Reichsarzt SS und Polizei); and Chief of the Hygienic Institute of the Waffen SS (Chef des Hygienischen Institutes der Waffen SS) I G G G Death, executed 2 June 1948.
Herta Oberheuser Herta Oberheuser.jpg Physician at the Ravensbrück concentration camp; and Assistant Physician to the defendant Gebhardt at the hospital at Hohenlychen I G G   20 years' imprisonment, commuted to 5 years. Released 1952, died 1978
Adolf Pokorny Adolf Pokorny.jpg Physician, Specialist in Skin and Venereal Diseases I I I   Acquitted
Helmut Poppendick Helmut Poppendick.jpg Oberführer (Senior Colonel) in the SS; and Chief of the Personal Staff of the Reich Physician SS and Police (Chef des Persönlichen Stabes des Reichsarztes SS und Polizei) I I I G 10 years imprisonment. Released 1951, died 1994
Hans-Wolfgang Romberg Wolfgang Romberg.jpg Doctor on the Staff of the Department for Aviation Medicine at the German Experimental Institute for Aviation I I I   Acquitted. Died 1981
Gerhard Rose Gerhard Rose.jpg Generalarzt of the Luftwaffe (Major General, Medical Service of the Air Force); Vice President, Chief of the Department for Tropical Medicine, and Professor of the Robert Koch Institute; and Hygienic Adviser for Tropical Medicine to the Chief of the Medical Service of the Luftwaffe I G G   Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 20 years. Released 1955, died 1992
Paul Rostock Paul Rostock (NS-Mediziner).jpg Chief Surgeon of the Surgical Clinic in Berlin; Surgical Adviser to the Army; and Chief of the Office for Medical Science and Research (Amtschef der Dienststelle Medizinische Wissenschaft und Forschung) under the defendant Karl Brandt, Reich Commissioner for Health and Sanitation I I I   Acquitted. Died 1956
Siegfried Ruff Siegfr Ruff.jpg Director of the Department for Aviation Medicine at the German Experimental Institute for Aviation (Deutsche Versuchsanstalt für Luftfahrt) and First Lieutenant in the Medical Service of the Air Force; still researching and publishing in the field of aviation as late as 1989 (Ruff et al. 1989). I I I   Acquitted. Died 1989
Konrad Schäfer Konrad Schaefer.jpg Doctor on the Staff of the Institute for Aviation Medicine in Berlin I I I   Acquitted
Oskar Schröder Oskar Schroeder.jpg Generaloberstabsarzt (Colonel General Medical Service); Chief of Staff of the Inspectorate of the Medical Service of the Luftwaffe (Chef des Stabes, Inspekteur des Luftwaffe-Sanitätswesens); and Chief of the Medical Service of the Luftwaffe (Chef des Sanitätswesens der Luftwaffe) I G G   Lifetime imprisonment, commuted to 15 years. Released 1954, died 1958
Wolfram Sievers Wolfram Sievers.jpg Standartenführer (Colonel) in the SS; Reich Manager of the Ahnenerbe Society and Director of its Institute for Military Scientific Research (Institut für Wehrwissenschaftliche Zweckforschung); and Deputy Chairman of the Managing Board of Directors of the Reich Research Council I G G G Death, executed 2 June 1948.
Georg August Weltz Georg Weltz.jpg Oberfeldarzt in the Luftwaffe (Lieutenant Colonel, Medical Service, of the Air Force); and Chief of the Institute for Aviation Medicine in Munich I I I   Acquitted

Outcomes

Death Sentences

All of the seven criminals sentenced to death were hanged on June 2, 1948, in Landsberg prison, Bavaria.

Imprisonments

The nine doctors/administrator found guilty were sentenced to between ten years in prison and life imprisonment. However, the sentences of these defendants were reduced during the appeal process. Handloser and Genzken, who had been sentenced to life imprisonment, had their sentences commuted (substitution of a lesser penalty after a conviction) to 20 years. Schroder, Rose, and Fischer, who had been sentenced to life imprisonment, had their sentences commuted to 15 years. (Rose's sentence was reduced on January 31, 1951, by the American High Commissioner John J. McCloy.) Becker-Freyseng, who had been sentenced to 20 years, and Beiglböck who had been sentenced to fifteen years, had their sentences commuted to ten years. Oberheuserm who had been sentenced to twenty years, had her sentence commuted to ten years and was released after five years, in April 1952, for good behavior. Poppendick, who had been acquitted from being criminally implicated in medical experiments, but was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for membership in a criminal organization (SS) was released on January 31, 1951 (USHMM 3).

Wilhelm Beiglböck, Fritz Fischer, and Herta Oberheuser were able to resume their careers after release from prison. From 1952 to 1963, Beiglböck served as the chief physician at the Hospital of Buxtehude. Fischer started a new career at the chemical company Boehringer in Ingelheim, after regaining his license to practice medicine. Oberheuser became a family doctor in Stocksee, near Kiel, in West Germany. However, she lost her position in August 1958 after being recognized by a Ravensbrück survivor and the interior minister of Schleswig-Holstein, Helmut Lemke, revoked her medical license and shut down her practice.

Acquitted

Among those acquitted, it was generally accepted that Kurt Blome actually had participated in chemical and biological warfare experiments on concentration camp inmates, but was saved by American intervention in exchange for information about biological warfare, nerve gas, and providing advice to the American chemical and biological weapons programs.

See also

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ruff, Siegfried, Martin Ruck, and Gerhard Sedlmayr. 1989. Sicherheit und Rettung in der Luftfahrt. Koblenz: Verlag Bernard & Graefe.
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). n.d. The Doctors' Trial. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). n.d.3. Sentences. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved November 9, 2021.
  • United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). 2006. Nazi medical experiments. Washington, D.C: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved October 5, 2021.
  • Wachsmann, Nikolaus. 2015. A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps. New York, NY: Farrar Straus & Giroux. ISBN 978-0374118259.
  • Weindling, Paul J. 2011. The Nazi Medical Experiments. Chapter 2, pages 18-30 in Ezekiel J. Emanuel, Christine C. Grady, Robert A. Crouch, Reidar k. Lie, Franklin G. Miller, and David D Wendler (Eds.), The Oxford Textbook of Clinical Research Ethics. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199768639.


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