AFTERNOON SESSION (The Tribunal reconvened at 1330 hours, 16 July 1947.) THE MARSHAL: The Tribunal is again in sessi [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: It would seem clear that you will not be able to use all of this argument which has been placed before [ ... ]
This we have heard here in the court room with particularly startling clearness from the former defendant Albert Speer. But it is just through the N [ ... ]
shown conclusively that Dr. Blome has the merit and the right to claim the merit, that he has done everything in the power of a human being to proce [ ... ]
as I have said on pages 18 to 20 of my plea. The unimportant fact that a man like Rudolf Brandt, in his various affidavits, has assumed that Blome w [ ... ]
could not take legal steps to end a life before its time had come. We think of those very ill people who can not be cured, who can only expect physi [ ... ]
had for many years made the fight against tuberculosis the aim of his life and because he built his cancer institute in the same Gau in which Gaulei [ ... ]
but from Greiser's cover note of 21 November 1942 it is obvious that Hitler also had given his approval to the extermination of the Poles already be [ ... ]
disappear in a concentration camp without any legal sentence. With such a primitive method as entering a solemn protest by calling on the laws of hu [ ... ]
had been made, and that he would rather resign than become a party to a mass murder, then Hitler would have had his customary fit, Blome would have [ ... ]