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  t347  International Military Tribunal
"Blue Series," Vol. 11
(British Edition), p. 347
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The Holocaust History Project.

The Holocaust History Project.
ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTH DAY

MONDAY, 15TH APRIL, 1946

 

THE MARSHALL: May it please the Tribunal: The report is made that the defendant Ribbentrop is absent from this session of the Court.

THE PRESIDENT: I will deal first of all with the documents of the defendant Rosenberg.

The Tribunal rules that all the documents in Book I, Volume I and Volume II, should be denied, up to and including the book by Hellpach - that is to say, Exhibits 1 to 6, and also Exhibits 7E and Exhibit 8.

Secondly, the Tribunal rules that it will take judicial notice of Exhibits 7 and 7A to 7D. But it rules that those Exhibits, 7 to 7D, are not to be read at the present stage but may be quoted by counsel in his final speech.

Thirdly, the Tribunal allows Books II and III; and

Fourthly, the Tribunal rules that the defendant Rosenberg shall be called first, and any documents which have been allowed may be put to him in the course of his examination.

That is all.

THE PRESIDENT: Now, Dr. Kauffmann.

DR. KAUFFMANN (counsel for defendant Kaltenbrunner): With the agreement of the Tribunal, I now call the witness Hoess.

RUDOLF HOESS, a witness, took the stand and testified as follows:

BY THE PRESIDENT:

Stand up. Will you state your name?

WITNESS: Rudolf Franz Ferdinand Hoess.

THE PRESIDENT: Will you repeat this oath after me: I swear by God, the Almighty and Omniscient, that I will speak the pure truth and will withhold and add nothing? (The witness repeated the oath.)

THE PRESIDENT: Will you sit down?

DIRECT EXAMINATION

BY DR. KAUFFMANN:

Q. Witness, your statements will have far-reaching significance. You are perhaps the only one who can throw some light upon certain hidden aspects, and who can tell what people gave the order for the destruction of European Jewry, and can further state how this order was carried out and to what degree the execution was kept a secret.

THE PRESIDENT: Dr. Kauffmann, will you kindly put questions to the witness?

DR. KAUFFMANN: Yes.

BY DR. KAUFFMANN:

Q. From 1940 to 1943, you were the commandant of the camp at Auschwitz.

Is that true?

A. Yes.

Q. And during that time, hundreds of thousands of human beings were sent to their death there. Is that correct?

A. Yes.

Q. Is it true that you, yourself, have made no exact notes regarding the figures of the number of those victims because you were forbidden to make them?




347
   
Prev   Text:

English
  t347  International Military Tribunal
"Blue Series," Vol. 11
(British Edition), p. 347
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  Next

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