7 Jan. 46
"The Military Commission met at Rome,
Italy, on 8 October 1945, and proceeded with the trial of the case of
the United States versus Anton Dostler. The trial of this case
consumed 4 days, and the findings and sentence were announced on the
morning of 12 October 1945. The charge and specification in this case
are as follows:
"Charge: Violation of the law of war.
"Specification: In that Anton Dostler, then general, commanding
military forces of the German Reich, a belligerent enemy nation, to
wit the 75th Army Corps, did, on or about 24 March 1944, in the
vicinity of La Spezia, Italy, contrary to the law of war, order to be
shot summarily, a group of United States Army personnel consisting of
two officers and 13 enlisted men who had then recently been captured
by forces under General Dostler, which order was carried into
execution on or about 26 March 1944, resulting in the death of the
said 15 members of the Army of the United States ... " and
a list of names follows.
"I was present throughout the entire proceeding. I heard all the
testimony and I am familiar with the records in this case. The facts
developed in this proceeding are as follows:
"On the night of 22 March 1944 two officers and 13 enlisted men
of the 2677th Special Reconnaissance Battalion of the Army of the
United States disembarked from some United States Navy boats and
landed on the Italian coast near Stazione di Framura. All 15 men were
members of the Army of the United States and were in the military
service of the United States. When they landed on the Italian coast,
they were all properly dressed in the field uniform of the United
States Army and they carried no civilian clothes. Their mission was to
demolish a railroad tunnel on the main line between La Spezia and
Genoa. That rail line was being used by the German forces to supply
their fighting forces on the Cassino and Anzio beachhead fronts. The
entire group was captured on the morning of 24 March 1944 by a patrol
consisting of Fascist soldiers and a group of members of the German
Army. All 15 men were placed under interrogation in "La Spezia
and they were held in custody until the morning of 26 March 1944, when
they were all executed by a firing squad. These men were never tried
nor were they brought before any court or given any hearing; they were
shot by order of Anton Dostler, then general commanding the 75th
German Army Corps.
"Anton Dostler took the stand' in this case and testified, by
way of defense, that he ordered the 15 American soldiers to