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14 Nov.
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Charter, trial in absentia is permitted on
principle against defendants who cannot be located, then corresponding
laws of procedure of all states, and even of the German Code of Criminal
Procedure agree to that.
A defendant who has escaped is
absolutely different from a defendant who cannot argue his case, because
in contrast to the latter, he has the possibility of appearing in court
and thus, of defending himself. If he deliberately avoids this
possibility, then he arbitrarily makes himself responsible for the
disadvantages and dangers entailed by his absence. In this case,
naturally, there would be no question of an unjust trial.
The
view has been expressed in recent days and weeks that world opinion
demands a trial against the Defendant Krupp under all circumstances, and
even in absentia, because Krupp is the owner of the greatest German
armament works and also one of the principal war criminals. So far as
this demand of world opinion is based on the assumption that Krupp is
one of the principal war criminals, it must be replied that this
accusation is as yet only a thesis of the Prosecution, which must first
be proved in the Trial.
The essential thing, however, in my
opinion, is that it is not important whether world opinion or, perhaps,
to use an expression forged in the Nazi work-shop, "the healthy
instincts of the people," or even political considerations play a
part in the decision of this question, but that the question (Article
12) must be decided uniquely from the point of view of whether justice
demands the trial against Krupp. I do not want to deny that the cries of
justice may be the same as the cries echoing world opinion. However, the
demands of world opinion and the demands of justice may be in
contradiction to each other.
In the present case, however, a
contradiction between the demands of world opinion for a trial against
Krupp in absentia and the demands of justice exists because, as I just
related, it would violate the recognized principles of the legal
procedures of all states and especially Article 12 of the Charter, to
try a mentally deranged man who cannot defend himself in a trial in
which everything is at stake for the defendant,-his honor, his
existence, and above all, the question of whether he belongs to the
accursed circle of the arch-war criminals who brought such frightful
misery to humanity and to their own Fatherland. I do not even wish,
however, to put the disadvantages and dangers for the man and the
interests of the defendant into the foreground. Much more significant
are the dangers and disadvantages of such an unusual procedure for basic
justice, because the procedure against such a defendant, who is unfit
for trial due to his total inability to conduct his defense properly,
cannot guarantee a just and right decision. This danger for basic
justice, must, in my opinion, be avoided by a court of
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