its limit only in the revolution of its citizens. In obeying the orders of his State, the defendant Karl Brandt did no wrong. If sentence is passed [ ... ]
the individual himself took for inviolable according to traditions. What did the airman think who dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima? Did [ ... ]
mental authority. The question remains why, with the legal position so clear, a man like Keitel refused to have such experiments carried out in the [ ... ]
piations "purchased voluntariness." Here the experimental subject does not make a sacrifice out of conviction for the good of the community, but fo [ ... ]
approved for me in order to get further information about this matter have not been answers, as superior authorities did not give the permission to [ ... ]
there of given by the witnesses. Moreover Karl Brandt was not given these functions until 1944, when these experiments were practically finished, as [ ... ]
Further, three medical experiments relate to the defendant Karl Brandt: The Hepatitis experiment, which he is said to have suggested, was not carri [ ... ]
so-called research assignments and he only investigated whether the aim was necessary for war, not how the experiment was to be carried out. He coul [ ... ]
Take 20 Morell, the latter's personal physician, soon tried to undermine the confidence placed in Karl Brandt so that he was charged with commissio [ ... ]
Brandt's duties; for what would have been the meaning of this cessation if after it an increased activity was to set in. The contacts of Karl Brand [ ... ]