Court No. III, Case No. 3. of this question leads to no other result than recognition of the fact that the criterion of German and of Anglo-Saxon opi [ ... ]
Court No. III, Case No. 3. The prosecution considered the introduction of an analoguous application of law in article 2 of the German penal code as a [ ... ]
Court No. III, Case No. 3. never-ceasing and for him very dangerous fight which brought him gradually into ever stronger opposition to the circles ar [ ... ]
Court No. III, Case No. 3. permit me to say so, this has been of enormous difficulty because the impression of his rationalistic personality is a dif [ ... ]
Court No. III, Case No. 3. that ha desired something which conformed with the idea of dignity of man and liberty of judicial proceedings which we str [ ... ]
MR. LA FOLLETTE: If your Honors please, the Prosecution recognizes its own fallibility. In checking, it finds that w [ ... ]
May it please the Tribunal! When discussing the case of the judge who is subject to the law and that of the public prosecutor who is restricted by [ ... ]
In Germany, the position of the judge was characterized by his absolute subordination to the law. Some interested witnesses made the supplementary [ ... ]
head of the state, now, had also the power to enter his "extraordinary" appeal and thus to extinguish every verdict fundamentally; not by lodging th [ ... ]
It cannot replace the legal remedies, for it presupposes logically a final, unappealable decision. The actual reasons for granting clemency cannot [ ... ]