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[respon-]sible for, aided and abetted, and took a consenting part in,
medical experiments performed on non-German nationals against their consent; in
the course of which experiments deaths, brutalities, cruelties, tortures, and
other inhuman acts were committed on the experimental subjects. To the extent
that these experiments did not constitute war crimes they constitute crimes
against humanity.
CONCLUSION
Military Tribunal I finds and
adjudges the defendant Oskar Schroeder guilty under counts two and three of the
indictment.
GENZKEN
The defendant Genzken is charged under counts two and three of the
indictment with special responsibility for, and participation in,
Sulfanilamide, Spotted Fever, Poison, and Incendiary Bomb Experiments. The
prosecution has abandoned the two latter charges and hence they will not be
considered further. The defendant is also charged under count four of the
indictment with membership, after 1 September 1939, in an organization declared
criminal by the judgment of the International Military Tribunal namely,
the SS.
Genzken was commissioned in the Medical Service of the German
Navy in 1912 and served through the First World War in that capacity. From 1919
to 1934, he engaged in the private practice of medicine. He joined the NSDAP in
1926, and in October 1934 he was again commissioned as a reserve officer of the
naval medical department. On 1 March 1936 he was transferred to the medical
department of the SS, with the rank of major, and assigned to the medical
department of a branch of the SS, which in the summer of 1940 became the Waffen
SS. He served as chief surgeon of the SS hospital in Berlin, and was director
of the department charged with supplying medical equipment and with the
supervision of medical personnel in concentration camps. He was also medical
supervisor to Eicke, the head of all the concentration camps, which were within
Genzken's jurisdiction insofar as medical matters were concerned. In May 1940,
Genzken was appointed Chief of the Medical Office of the Waffen SS with the
rank of senior colonel, Grawitz being his medical superior. He retained this
position until the close of the war. In 1942 he was designated as Chief of the
Medical Service of the Waffen SS, Division D of the SS Operational
Headquarters. On 30 January 1943 he was appointed Gruppenfuehrer and
Generalleutnant in the Waffen SS.
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