20 Nov. 45
2. Control acquired:
On 30 January 1933 Hitler became Chancellor of
the German Republic. After the Reichstag fire of 28 February 1933,
clauses of the Weimar constitution guaranteeing personal liberty,
freedom of speech, of the press, of association, and assembly were
suspended. The Nazi conspirators secured the passage by the Reichstag
of a "Law for the Protection of the People and the Reich"
giving Hitler and the members of 0a then cabinet plenary powers of
legislation. The Nazi conspirators retained such powers after having
changed the members of the cabinet. The conspirators caused all
political parties except the Nazi Party to be prohibited. They caused
the Nazi Party to be established as a para-governmental organization
with extensive and extraordinary privileges.
3. Consolidation of control:
Thus possessed of the machinery of the German
State, the Nazi conspirators set about the consolidation of their
position of power within Germany, the extermination of potential
internal resistance, and the placing of the German nation on a
military footing.
(a) The Nazi conspirators reduced the Reichstag
to a body of their own nominees and curtailed the freedom of popular
elections throughout the country. They transformed the several
states, provinces, and municipalities, which had formerly exercised
semi-autonomous powers, into hardly more than administrative organs
of the central Government. They united the offices of the President
and the Chancellor in the person of Hitler, instituted a widespread
purge of civil servants, and severely restricted the independence of
the judiciary and rendered it subservient to Nazi ends. The
conspirators greatly enlarged existing State and Party organizations,
established a network of new State and Party organizations, and
"co-ordinated" State agencies with the Nazi Party and its
branches and affiliates, with the result that German life was
dominated by Nazi doctrine and practice and progressively mobilized
for the accomplishment of their aims.
(b) In order to make their rule secure from
attack and to instill fear in the hearts of the German people, the
Nazi conspirators established and extended a system of terror against
opponents and supposed or suspected opponents of the regime. They
imprisoned such persons without judicial process, holding them in
"protective custody" and concentration camps, and subjected
them to persecution, degradation, despoilment, enslavement, torture,
and murder. These concentration camps were established early in 1933
under the direction of the Defendant Goring and expanded as a fixed
part of the terroristic policy and method of the conspirators and
used by them for the commission of the Crimes against