FIFTH DAY
Monday, 26 November 1945
Morning Session
DR. FRITZ SAUTER (Counsel for Defendant Von
Ribbentrop): May it please the Court, I should like to make an
application. I am Dr. Sauter, counsel for the Defendant Von
Ribbentrop. On 30 October the Defendant Von Ribbentrop requested that
his former secretary, Margareta Blank, at that time in the Remand
Prison in Nuremberg, be placed at his disposal in order that he might
dictate his reply to the Indictment, as well as a description of the
manner in which he performed his official duties in the last 7 or 8
years.
On 11 November 1945 the Tribunal allowed this request. The
Defendant Von Ribbentrop was therefore able to dictate for a few
hours, but this was stopped for reasons unknown to him. Neither has
the Defendant Von Ribbentrop had returned to him the shorthand notes
or the typed transcript. He has not been able to dictate any more to
Fräulein Blank.
On 15 November Ribbentrop repeated his request regarding the
witness Blank, but up to the present she has not been placed again at
his disposal. The Defendant Ribbentrop therefore requests the
President to give instructions that his former secretary, Margareta
Blank, again be placed at his disposal in order to take down the
necessary notes from dictation. Such permission appears to be
absolutely essential to enable the Defendant Ribbentrop properly to
prepare his own testimony and the testimony of the defense witnesses.
Particularly in the case of Von Ribbentrop, the material to be
treated is so voluminous, that no other way of treating it appears
feasible to us. The Defendant Von Ribbentrop has a further request to
make. He has repeatedly asked that some of his former colleagues, in
particular Ambassador Gauss, Ambassador Von Rintelen, Minister Von
Sonnleitner, Professor Fritz Berber, and Under State Secretary Henke,
be brought to Nuremberg as witnesses, and that he be permitted to
speak to these witnesses in the presence of his counsel. This request
had in part been refused by the Court on 10 November. The remaining
part has not yet been decided.
It is quite impossible for the Defendant Von Ribbentrop to give a
clear and exhaustive account of the entire foreign policy for the
last 7 or 8 years if nothing is placed at his disposal except a
pencil