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legal in nature or which at least are so clearly related
to matters legal that they assist us in determining criminal culpability and
punishment. To go beyond that point would lead us into a field that would be
beyond our sphere of competence. However, the point need not be labored. We
find from the evidence that in the medical experiments which have been proved,
these ten principles were much more frequently honored in their breach than in
their observance. Many of the concentration camp inmates who were the victims
of these atrocities were citizens of countries other than the German Reich.
They were non-German nationals, including Jews and "asocial persons",
both prisoners of war and civilians, who had been imprisoned and forced to
submit to these tortures and barbarities without so much as a semblance of
trial. In every single instance appearing in the record, subjects were used who
did not consent to the experiments; indeed, as to some of the experiments, it
is not even contended by the defendants that the subjects occupied the status
of volunteers. In no case was the experimental subject at liberty of his own
free choice to withdraw from any experiment. In many cases experiments were
performed by unqualified persons; were conducted at random for no adequate
scientific reason, and under revolting physical conditions. All of the
experiments were conducted with unnecessary suffering and injury and but very
little, if any, precautions were taken to protect or safeguard the human
subjects from the possibilities of injury, disability, or death. In every one
of the experiments the subjects experienced extreme pain or torture, and in
most of them they suffered permanent injury, mutilation, or death, either as a
direct result of the experiments or because of lack of adequate follow-up care.
Obviously all of these experiments involving brutalities, tortures, disabling
injury, and death were performed in complete disregard of international
conventions, the laws and customs of war, the general principles of criminal
law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, and Control
Council Law No. 10. Manifestly human experiments under such conditions are
contrary to "the principles of the law of nations as they result from the
usages established among civilized peoples, from the laws of humanity, and from
the dictates of public conscience."
Whether any of the defendants in the dock are guilty of these atrocities is, of
course, another question.
Under the Anglo-Saxon system of jurisprudence every defendant in a criminal
case is presumed to be innocent of an offense charged until the prosecution, by
competent, credible proof, has shown his guilt to the exclusion of every
reasonable doubt. And this presumption abides with a defendant through each
stage of
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