informed of the Hitler Jugend's participation in the
plan put into effect in the fall of 1944 under which 50,000 young
people between the ages of 10 and 20 were evacuated into Germany from
areas recaptured by the Soviet forces and used as apprentices in
German industry and as auxiliaries in units of the German Armed
Forces. In the summer of 1942 Von Schirach telegraphed Bormann urging
that a bombing attack on an English cultural town be carried out in
retaliation for the assassination of Heydrich which, he claimed, had
been planned by the British.
Conclusion
The Tribunal finds that Von Schirach is not
guilty on Count One. He is guilty under Count Four.
SAUCKEL
Sauckel is indicted under all four Counts.
Sauckel joined the Nazi Party in 1923, and became Gauleiter of
Thuringia in 1927. He was a member of the Thuringian legislature from
1927 to 1933, was appointed Reichsstatthalter for Thuringia in 1932,
and Thuringian Minister of the Interior and head of the Thuringian
State Ministry in May 1933. He became a member of the Reichstag in
1933. He held the formal rank of Obergruppenführer in both the
SA and the SS.
Crimes against Peace
The evidence has not satisfied the Tribunal that
Sauckel was sufficiently connected with the common plan to wage
aggressive war or sufficiently involved in the planning or waging of
the aggressive wars to allow the Tribunal to convict him on Counts
One or Two.
War Crimes and Crimes against
Humanity
On 21 March 1942 Hitler appointed Sauckel
Plenipotentiary General for the Utilization of Labor, with authority
to put under uniform control "the utilization of all available
manpower, including that of workers recruited abroad and of prisoners
of war". Sauckel was instructed to operate within the fabric of
the Four Year Plan, and on 27 March 1942 Göring issued a decree
as Commissioner for the Four Year Plan transferring his manpower
sections to Sauckel. On 30 September 1942 Hitler gave Sauckel
authority to appoint Commissioners in the various occupied
territories, and "to take all necessary measures for the
enforcement" of the Decree of 21 March 1942.
Under the authority which he obtained by these
decrees, Sauckel set up a program for the mobilization of the labor
resources available to the Reich. One of the important parts of this
mobilization was the systematic exploitation, by force, of the labor
resources of the