20 Dec. 45
MAJOR FARR: This book covers the fourth voting period,
beginning on 10 April 1938 and covering the period up to 30 January 1947
that is, the voting period covers that course of years. The
edition, I think, was in 1943. 1 might point out that the rank of the
defendants mentioned in the 1936 and 1937 editions of the membership
list of the SS may not be the final rank they held. They were Gruppenführer
at that time, but they were members of the SS, as shown by the book.
It is our contention that the SS, as defined in Appendix B, Page 36 of
the Indictment, was an unlawful organization. As an organization founded
on the principle that persons of "German blood" were a "master
race" it exemplified a basic Nazi doctrine. It served as one of the
means through which the conspirators acquired control of the German
Government. The operations of the SD and of the SS Totenkopf Verbände
in concentration camps were means used by the conspirators to secure
their regime and terrorize their opponents, as alleged in Count One. In
the Nazi program of Jewish extermination, all branches of the SS were
involved from the very beginning. Through the Allgemeine SS as a
para-military organization, the SS Verfügungstruppe and SS
Totenkopf Verbände as professional combat forces, and the
Volksdeutsche Mittelstelle as a Fifth Column agency, the SS participated
in preparations for aggressive war and, through its militarized units,
in the waging of aggressive war in the West and in the East, as set
forth in Counts One and Two of the Indictment. In the course of such war
all components of the SS had a part in the War Crimes and the Crimes
against Humanity set forth in Counts Three and Four of the Indictment:
the murder and ill-treatment of civilian populations in occupied
territory, the murder and ill-treatment of prisoners of war, and the
Germanization of occupied territories.
The evidence has shown that the SS was a single enterprise a
unified organization. Some of its functions were, of course performed by
one branch or department or office, some by another. No single branch or
department participated in every phase of its activity, but every branch
and department and office was necessary to the functioning of the whole.
The situation is much the same as in the case of the individual
defendants at the bar. Not all participated in every act of the
conspiracy; but all, we contend, performed a contributing part in the
whole criminal scheme.
The evidence has also shown that the SS was not only an organization of
volunteers but that applicants had to meet the strictest standards of
selection. It was not easy to become an SS member. That was true of all
branches of the SS. We clearly recognize, of course, that during the
course of the war, as the demands for manpower increased and the losses
of the Waffen-SS grew heavier and