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REPORT OF PRISON PSYCHOLOGIST ON
MENTAL COMPETENCE OF DEFENDANT HESS *
17 August 1946
SUBJECT: Competence of Defendant Rudolf Hess
TO : General Secretary, International Military Tribunal.
1. In compliance with the Tribunal's request, the following facts and
studied opinions are submitted with respect to the competence of Rudolf
Hess, based on my continual tests and observations from October 1945 to
the present time, in the capacity of prison psychologist:
2. Amnesia at beginning of trial. There can be no doubt that
Hess was in a state of virtually complete amnesia at the beginning of
the trial. The opinions of the psychiatric commissions in this regard
and with respect to his sanity have only been substantiated by prolonged
subsequent observation.
3. Recovery. On the day of the special hearing in his case, 30
November 1945, Rudolf Hess did, in fact, recover his memory. The cause
of his sudden recovery is an academic question, but the following event
probably played a part: Just before the hearing I told Hess (as a
challenge) that he might be considered incompetent at that time and
excluded from the proceedings, but I would sometimes see him in his
cell. Hess seemed startled and said he thought he was competent.
Then he gave his declaration of malingering in court, apparently as a
face-saving device. In later conversations he admitted to me that he had
not been malingering, and that he knew he had lost his memory twice in
England. During the months of December 1945, and January 1946, his
memory was quite in order.
4. Relapse. At the end of January I began to notice the
beginnings of memory failure. This increased progressively during
February, until he returned to a state of virtually complete amnesia
again about the beginning of March, and he has remained in that state
ever since. (At the beginning of relapse, Hess expressed anxiety over
it, saying that no one would believe him this time after he had said he
had faked his amnesia the first time.) The amnesia is progressive, each
day's events being quickly forgotten. At present his memory span is
about one-half day, and his apprehension span has dropped from 7 to 4
digits repeated correctly immediately after hearing.
* This report was referred to Counsel for Defendant
Hess by order of the Tribunal, 20 August 1946, in reference to the
motion of 2 August 1946 on behalf of the defendant. This motion, which
reviewed at length the previous examinations and psychiatric history of
Defendant Hess, was a request "to subject the Defendant Hess once
more . . . to an examination by psychiatric experts with regard to his
ability to stand trial and his soundness of mind."
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