20 Nov. 45
of sovereignty, and were entitled to call upon and utilize the
various Party formations when necessary for the execution of Party
policies.
Reference is hereby made to the allegations in Count One of the
Indictment showing that the Nazi Party was the central core of the
Common Plan or Conspiracy therein set forth. The Politischen Leiter,
as a major power within the Nazi Party proper, and functioning in the
capacities above described and in association as a group, joined in
the Common Plan or Conspiracy, and accordingly share responsibility
for the crimes set forth in Counts One, Two, Three, and Four of the
Indictment.
The Prosecution expressly reserves the right to request, at any
time before sentence is pronounced, that Politischer Leiter of
subordinate grades or ranks or of other types or classes, to be
specified by the prosecution, be excepted from further proceedings in
this Case Number 1, b ut without prejudice to other proceedings or
actions against them.
"Die Schutzstaffeln der Nationalsozialistischen Deutschen
Arbeiterpartei (commonly known as the SS) including Der
Sicherheitsdienst (commonly known as the SD)" referred to in the
Indictment consists of the entire corps of the SS and all offices,
departments, services, agencies, branches, formations, organizations,
and groups of which it was at any time comprised or which were at any
time integrated in it, including but not limited to, the Allgemeine
SS, the Waffen SS, the SS Totenkopf Verbände, SS Polizei
Regimenter, and the Sicherheitsdienst des Reichsführers SS
(commonly known as the SD).
The SS, originally established by Hitler in 1925 as an elite
section of the SA to furnish a protective guard for the Führer
and Nazi Party leaders, became an independent formation of the Nazi
Party in 1934 under the leadership of the Reichsführer SS,
Heinrich Himmler. It was composed of voluntary members, selected in
accordance with Nazi biological, racial, and political theories,
completely indoctrinated in Nazi ideology and pledged to
uncompromising obedience to the Führer. After the accession of
the Nazi conspirators to power, it developed many departments,
agencies, formations, and branches and extended its influence and
control over numerous fields of governmental and Party activity.
Through Heinrich Himmler, as Reichsführer SS and Chief of the
German Police, agencies and units of the SS and of the Reich were
joined in operation to form a unified repressive police force. The
Sicherheitsdienst des Reichsführers SS (commonly known as the
SD), a department of the SS, was developed into a vast espionage and
counter-intelligence system which operated in conjunction with the
Gestapo and criminal police in detecting, suppressing, and
eliminating tendencies, groups, and individuals deemed hostile or
poten-