The London Charter, in Articles 9 and 10, had provided for charges to be brought against criminal organizations. By early autumn, prosecutors had decided to address the problem of institutional criminality, in the Army and elsewhere, by charging six allegedly criminal (and dissolved) organizations: the SS (including the SD), the Gestapo, the SA, the Reich Cabinet, the "Leadership Corps of the Nazi Party,"and the "General Staff and High Command" of the military. At first glance, it might seem that all but the last of these charges were made more for their historical and symbolic than their practical value; after all, the Nazi Cabinet and security and killing apparatus had collapsed with Germany's surrender, and the SA in particular had been reduced to insignificance since 1934. Moreover, some ofthe cases were openand-shut: it is difficult to imagine arguments being made for the innocence ofthe Gestapo [Arguments were made and evidence taken, however, for each of the accused organizations, and the fruits of this evidence are collected in the so-called Neave Report, 42 IMT 1, 1-153 (1949). Each ofthe organizations was defended by counsel].
Although it was self-evident that some of these groups had been legal "organizations" whose members had committed monstrous crimes, proving this high-stakes legal issue with respect to other accused organizations remained difficult. Resolution of this issue, however, went to the heart of the future Allied occupation. According to the London Charter and Control Council Law No. 10 (the relevant decree ofthe Big Four occupation authorities), [Allied Control Council Law No. 10, art. II, 2(e)-(f) (Dec. 20, 1945), reprinted in 15 Trials of War Criminals 23, 24-25 (1949) Control Council Law No. 10] upon a finding of organizational guilt, persons shown to have been members of the organization were liable and punishable without proof of what the individuals had done in furtherance of the organization, or indeed without allegation that they had done anything at all. In other words, the charges against the Nazi organizations were like the conspiracy charges, and both were viewed as critical by Allied planners, notably Jackson [See Stanislaw Pomorski, Conspiracy and Criminal Organization, in The Nuremberg Trial and International Law]
Organizational liability was intended to be a principal means for the Allies to proceed against the potential millions of persons whose individual acts, in a foreign country in wartime, the Allies could never hope to prove, but whose membership in, say, the Gestapo could be easily proven from official documents. |