Nobody can be convicted of premeditated murder if he did not participate in a plan to commit murder, unless it can be proved that when he participated in the plan for robbing the bank such killing of a guard was already contemplated and that in spite of this he approved the plan for the bank robbery. In that case he, too, would have deliberately contributed to the murder. In other words, according to the provisions of German substantive criminal law there does not exist a liability for so-called excesses of the immediate culprits or for an unforeseen development of plans not originally conceived on such a wide scope, so that a more far-reaching interpretation in line with the concept of conspiracy in Anglo-American law, which at the time when the accused committed their deed did not exist, would violate the principle which prohibits retroactive application of penal laws.
ONE HUNDRED
AND SEVENTY-SEVENTH DAY
Friday, 12 July 1946
Morning Session
THE PRESIDENT: The Tribunal will adjourn today at 4 o’clock.
DR. MARX: Mr. President, with the permission of the Tribunal I shall now continue with the presentation of the final plea for the Defendant Streicher. Yesterday I had come to the point where the individual accusations against Streicher had been summarized, and I had taken liberty of explaining that these accusations are subdivided into three different paragraphs:
1. Support of seizure of power and consolidation of the power of the NSDAP after its entry into the Government.
2. Preparation of aggressive wars by propaganda aimed at the persecution of the Jews.
3. Intellectual and spiritual preparation and education of the German people and German youth to effect the destruction of Jewry and to encourage hatred of the Jews.
With respect to Count One of the Indictment, the defendant does not deny that, with regard to the Party’s later seizure of power, he supported and promoted it with all his might from the very beginning. His support went to the extent of a whole movement which he had built up personally in Franconia and which he put at the disposal of Adolf Hitler’s Party, which was quite small after the first World War and limited to Southern Bavaria only. Furthermore, after Hitler’s release from the fortress of Landsberg he immediately joined him again and subsequently championed his ideas and aims with the greatest determination.