[78] Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf (Munich, Verlag Frank Eher, G.m.b.H., 1933 [copyright 1925]), pp. 556-557.
[79] Reichsgesetzblatt (1935), p. 1145.
[80] Ibid. (1937), p. 442.
[81] Organisationsbuch der NSDAP (Munich, 1940), p. 8.
[82] Reichsgesetzblatt (1933), p. 83.
[83] Ibid.
[84] In his book Die deutsche Polizei (The German Police) (Darmstadt, L.C. Wittich Verlag, 1941), p. 24, the prominent Nazi police official, Dr. Werner Best, wrote that this law "is to be regarded not as a 'police law'—that is, as the regulation of police functions and activities—but as the expression of the new conception of the state as it has been transformed by the National Socialist revolution, from which the new 'police' concept is derived." Also, this law was for the police "the confirmation that the work already begun was in agreement with the law giving will of the Supreme Leadership of the Reich."
[85] Huber, Verfassungsrecht des grossdeutschen Reiches (Hamburg, 1939) p. 288.
[86] Neesse, op. cit., p. 131.
[87] Gauweiler, op. cit., p. 3.