struggle for the most noble idea for which it was fought for every 100 years and for which the flag was raised. trial; then, in my conviction, a firs [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: I call upon the Defendant Hans Frank. DEFENDANT HANS FRANK: May it pleas [ ... ]
away from God would have such disastrous deathly consequences and that, as a matter of course, we might one day be involved deeply in this guilt. At t [ ... ]
which I must be responsible. I also recognized that degree of guilt which it must be ,y part to assume as a fighter for Adolf Hitler, his movement, an [ ... ]
31 Aug M LJG 8-1a Daniels THE PRESIDENT: I call upon the defendant Julius Streicher. DEFENDANT [ ... ]
31 Aug A LJG 9-1 Saslaw were to be a revenge, a reprisal which was only Carried through because of the then recognizable unfavorable course of the war [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: I call upon the defendant Walter Funk. DEFENDANT WALTER FUNK: In the day [ ... ]
Never did even a single person tell me in a single word of incidents like that. unknown. I did not even know a single one of their names. Never have [ ... ]
THE PRESIDENT: I call upon the defendant Hjalmar Schacht. DEFENDANT HJALMAR SCHACHT: My [ ... ]
My opposition to Hitler's policiess was known at home and abroad, and that so clearly that even in the year 1940 the Attache of the United States, Mr. [ ... ]