/a.doubtful
HaukeDeath
RitterDeath
SchellenbergerDeath
GiezeltDeath
/b.clear cut
/1. HoehnDeath
SchultzDeath
SeiffertDeath
/2. KroegerDeath
SplenemannDeath
FuebingerDeath
/3. BoeckerDeath
KaessDeath
/4. LuedtkeDeath
/5. HaitzmannDeath
BueschingerDeath
HaubergerDeath

The document shows that between 24 January 1944 and 24 January 1945, death sentences of more than 2,500 persons were confirmed. The largest number confirmed appears on the report of 22 September 1944, 128 cases; and the smallest number appears on the report of 4 January 1945, 25 cases. The report for 17 January 1945, mentioned specifically by the defendant Klemm, shows that 49 death sentences were confirmed.

[555] All the documents referred to are reproduced in the preface portion of this volume and are not reproduced as a part of this judgment. See Table of Contents.

[556] Text is reproduced in “The Axis in Defeat,” Department of State Publication No. 2423 (Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C.), pages 24 and 25.

[557] Ibid., pages 62 and 63.

[558] Ibid, page 10 et seq.

[559] Alwyn V. Freeman, “War Crimes by Enemy Nationals Administering Justice in Occupied Territory,” The American Journal of International Law, XLI, July 1947, 605.

[560] John H. E. Fried, “Transfer of Civilian Manpower from Occupied Territory,” The American Journal of International Law, XL, April 1946, 326–327.

[561] Trial of the Major War Criminals, op. cit., judgment, volume I, page 254.

[562] Ibid., p. 218.