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a. Selection from the Argumentation of
the Prosecution
EXTRACT FROM THE
CLOSING STATEMENT OF THE PROSECUTION
* * * * * * * * * * * *
The Responsible
Leaders of the Medical Services
In view of the clear and
overwhelming proof, it can only be concluded that the practice of
experimentation on concentration camp inmates without their consent was an
organized and systematic program. It is, therefore, appropriate to consider
whether we have in this dock the leaders of the German medical services without
whom these crimes would not have been possible. It would be an unforgivable
miscarriage of justice to punish the doctors who worked on the victims in the
concentration camps while their superiors, the leaders, organizers, and
instigators go free. It has been established beyond controversy that these
things could not have happened without cover from the top. Who, then, were
these men on the top? Their survivors, with one exception, are all in this
dock.
In the number one seat we have the
defendant Karl Brandt. He held supreme authority over all the medical services
in Germany, both military and civilian. He joined the Nazi Party in January
1932 and the SS in 1934, in which he rose to the rank of Gruppenfuehrer [Major
General]. In the latter year, at the age of 30, he became the attending
physician to Adolf Hitler and retained this position until 1945. His close
personal relationship to the Fuehrer explains his rapid rise to power. On the
day Poland was invaded in 1939, Hitler ordered Brandt and Philipp Bouhler, the
Chief of the Chancellery of the Fuehrer, to carry out the so-called Euthanasia
Program.
Aside from his personal influence
and intimate connection with Hitler, Brandt's greatest power in the medical
services came from his position as General Commissioner and later Reich
Commissioner of the Health and Medical Services. As a result of the disastrous
winter campaign in the East in 1941, Hitler established for the first time a
medical and health official under his direct control by decree of 28 July 1942.
This decree made Brandt the supreme authority over all medical services in
Germany. It stated in part as follows:
"I empower professor Dr. Karl
Brandt, subordinate only to me personally and receiving his instructions
directly from me, to carry out special tasks and negotiations, to readjust the
requirements for doctors, hospitals, medical supplies, etc., between the
military and the civilian sectors of the Health and Medical Services.
_________________
* Closing statement is recorded in mimeographed transcript,
14 July 1947, pp. 10718 - 10796.
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