A. I had nothing to do with these matters. That can clearly be seen from the Gerstein document itself. [ ... ]
attitude towards this Nebe brief; or were you adopting an attitude, when you said that, on what you remembered from that conversation with Nebe?
[ ... ]
have phenol in it, can better be tolerated. THE PRESIDENT: I understand. That is sufficient. Counsel may proceed. < [ ... ]
In my opinion it was a matter of conscientiousness to test this, but it was not a matter of basic importance, because I do not know, or I had never [ ... ]
A. There can be no question of that whatsoever. There was a testing station in Germany, namely, one designated by a sp [ ... ]
witness on the part of any defense counsel? MR. HARDY: If defense counsel have no further questions, I have no furthe [ ... ]
MR. HARDY: Thank you, sir. THE PRESIDENT: I understand, counsel, that there will be no [ ... ]
Page 225 I shall not put in. May I ask whether the Tribunal has Document Book Number 2? I have a document book, Number 2, in which there are extract [ ... ]
that they have made experiments on human beings and that they committed no crime as they had nothing to hide. They were volunteers. But Mrugowsky on [ ... ]
world are such experiments considered criminal, because otherwise the Court would have to know of many objections in literature or in newspapers whe [ ... ]