WIESHOFER: From the beginning of October 1940.

MR. DODD: And you never heard of Strasshof?

WIESHOFER: No.

MR. DODD: Did you have much to do with the files of this Defendant Von Schirach?

WIESHOFER: Yes.

MR. DODD: What would you say you had to do with them? What was your responsibility?

WIESHOFER: I merely had to see to it that files were presented in good time for the conference, and that after they had been used they were returned to the Central Bureau.

MR. DODD: Where would you go to get a file for Von Schirach that had to do with the Reich Defense Commission for that district or that defense district? Where would you go to get a file that had to do with matters concerning the Reich Defense Commission? Now, let us assume a situation—let me make it clear to you. Say that Von Schirach tells you he wants a file about a certain matter that has to do with the Reich Defense Commission. You had to have it on his desk by a certain hour and see that it was there, as you say. Tell the Tribunal just what you would do, where you would go, who you would talk to, and how you would get that for him.

WIESHOFER: That would be simple for me. I would apply to the Chief of the Central Bureau, knowing that he would probably have to go to the Regierungspräsident to obtain that file. That is what I assume. I myself would only have gone to the Central Bureau.

MR. DODD: You had a central filing place, did you not, for all of your files, whether they were under the Reich Defense Commission or the Gauleiter or the civil government of Vienna; is that not so? They were all kept in one place?