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and IV of the Reich Ministry of Justice. In
Department III, for penal legislation, he dealt with international law,
formulating secret, general, and circular directives. He was regarded as an
eminent authority on international law. He handled Night and Fog cases and knew
the purpose and procedure in such cases. He knew that the decree was based upon
the Fuehrer's order of 7 December 1941 to the OKW. He knew that an agreement
existed between the Gestapo, the Reich Ministry of Justice, the Party
Chancellery, and the OKW with respect to the purposes of the Night and Fog
decree and the manner in which such matters were to be handled.
The
defendant von Ammon was Ministerial Councillor in Mettgenberg's subdivision and
was in charge of the Night and Fog section as shown in this judgment. The two
acted together on doubtful matters and referred difficult questions to
competent officials in the Reich Ministry of Justice and the Party Chancellery,
since both of these offices had to give their "agreement" in cases of malicious
attacks upon the Reich or Nazi Party or in the Night and Fog cases. The NN
cases came from the Wehrmacht but in some cases directly from the Gestapo.
These cases were assigned to Special Courts at several places in Germany and to
the People's Court at Berlin by defendant von Ammon. Mettgenberg and von Ammon
were sent to the Netherlands occupied territory because some German courts set
up there were receiving Night and Fog cases in violation of the decree that
they should be transferred to Germany. They held a conference at The Hague with
the highest military justice authority and the heads of the German courts in
the Netherlands, which resulted in a reference of the matter to the OKW at
Berlin which agreed with Mettgenberg and von Ammon that "the same procedure
should be used in the Netherlands as in other occupied territories, that is,
that all Night and Fog matters should be transferred to Germany."
In
Department IV for penal administration, Mettgenberg's work consisted of
inspecting execution equipment. He witnessed one execution in 1944. He was
entrusted with speeding up clemency applications because prisoners were
escaping during air raids. Reich Minister Thierack called the defendant,
Rothenberger, Under State Secretary, by telephone at Berlin and instructed him
to make decisions concerning the clemency in death sentence cases presented by
defendant Mettgenberg who made "reports lasting hours," and then Rothenberger
made the decisions.
The evidence does not positively show that clemency
cases presented by Mettgenberg and passed upon by Rothenberger were NN cases.
We think, however, that the only conclusion that can be reached from
Mettgenberg's testimony during the trial is that Rothenberger passed upon all
clemency matters presented to him |
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