members of the SD, including all local
representatives and agents honorary or otherwise, whether they were
technically members of the SS or not, but not including honorary
informers who were not members of the SS, and members of the Abwehr
who were transferred to the SD.
The Tribunal declares to be criminal within the meaning of the
Charter the group composed of those members of the Gestapo and SD
holding the positions enumerated in the preceding paragraph who
became or remained members of the organization with knowledge that it
was being used for the commission of acts declared criminal by
Article 6 of the Charter, or who were personally implicated as
members of the organization in the commission of such crimes. The
basis for this finding is the participation of the organization in
War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity connected with the war; this
group declared criminal cannot include, therefore, persons who had
ceased to hold the positions enumerated in the preceding paragraph
prior to 1 September 1939.
SS
Structure and Component Parts: The
Prosecution has named Die Schutzstaffeln der Nationalsozialistischen
Deutschen Arbeiterpartei (commonly known as the SS) as an
organization which should be declared criminal. The portion of the
Indictment dealing with the SS also includes Der Sicherheitsdienst
des Reichsführer-SS (commonly known as the SD). This latter
organization, which was originally an intelligence branch of the SS,
later became an important part of the organization of Security Police
and SD and is dealt with in the Tribunal's Judgment on the Gestapo.
The SS was originally established by Hitler in 1925 as an elite
section of the SA for political purposes under the pretext of
protecting speakers at public meetings of the Nazi Party. After the
Nazis had obtained power the SS was used to maintain order and
control audiences at mass demonstrations and was given the additional
duty of "internal security" by a decree of the Führer.
The SS played an important role at the time of the Röhm purge of
30 June 1934, and, as a reward for its services, was made an
independent unit of the Nazi Party shortly thereafter.
In 1929 when Himmler was first appointed as Reichs Führer
the SS consisted of 280 men who were regarded as especially
trustworthy. In 1933 it was composed of 52,000 men drawn from all
walks of life. The original formation of the SS was the Allgemeine
SS, which by 1939 had grown to a corps of 240,000 men, organized on
military lines into divisions and regiments. During the war its
strength declined to well under 40,000.