TRIAL OF THE MAJOR WAR CRIMINALS BEFORE THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL. NUERNBERG
OCTOBER 1946 -- APRIL 1949.

WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, 1950.
VOLUME 11. DOCUMENTS AND MATERIAL IN EVIDENCE

EXTRACTS FROM THE CASE IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA vs. WILHELM LIST et al.

PP. 70-93

1. INDICTMENT, INCLUDING APPENDIX LISTING POSITIONS OF THE DEFENDANTS

The United States of America, by the undersigned Telford Taylor, Chief of Counsel for War Crimes, duly appointed to represent said Government in the prosecution of war criminals, charges the defendants herein with the commission of war crimes and crimes against humanity, as defined in Control Council Law No. 10, duly enacted by the Allied Control Council on 20 December 1946. These crimes included murder, ill-treatment, and deportation to slave labor of prisoners of war and other members of the armed forces of nations at war with Germany, and of civilian populations of territories occupied by the German armed forces, plunder of public and private property, wanton destruction of cities, towns, and villages, and other atrocities and offenses against civilian populations.

The persons accused as guilty of these crimes and accordingly named as defendants in this case are:

WILHELM LISTÑGeneralfeldmarschall (General of the Army); Commander in Chief 12th Army, April-October 1941; Wehrmachtsbefehlshaber Sudost (Armed Forces Commander Southeast), June-October 1941; Commander in Chief Army Group A, Ju]y-September 1942.

MAXIMILIAN VON WEICHSÑGeneralfeldmarschall (General of the Army); Commander in Chief 2d Army, April 1941-July 1942; Commander in Chief Army Group B, July 1942-February 1943; Commander in Chief Army Group F and Supreme Commander Southeast, August 1943-March 1945.

LOTHAR RENDULICÑGeneraloberst (General); Commander in Chief 2d Panzer Army, August 1943-June 1944; Commander in Chief 20th Mountain Army, July 1944-January 1945; Wehrmachtsbefehlshaber Nord (Armed Forces Commander North), December 1944-January 1945; Commander in Chief Army Group North, January-March 194.5; Commander in Chief Army GrouP Courland, March-April 1945; Commander in Chief Army Group South, April-May 1945.

WALTER KUNTZEÑGeneral der Pioniere (Lieutenant General, Engineers); Acting Commander in Chief 12th Army, October 1941-August 1942.

HERMANN FOERTSCHÑGeneral der Infanterie (Lieutenant General, Infantry); Chief of Staff 12th Army, May 1941-August 1942; Chief of Staff Army Group E, August 1942-August 1943; Chief of Staff Army Group F, August 1943-March 1944.

FRANZ BOEHMEÑGeneral der Gebirgstruppen (Lieutenant General, Mountain Troops); Commander XVIII Mountain Arm~ Corps, April-December 1941; Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia, September-December 1941; Commander in Chief 2d Panzer Army, June~uly 1944; Commander in Chief 20th Mountain Army and Wehrmachtsbefehlshaber Nord (Armed Forces Commander North), January-May 1945.

HELMUTH FELMYÑGeneral der Flieger (Lieutenant General, Air Force); Commander Southern Greece, June 1941-August 1942; Commander LXVIII Army Corps, June 1943-October 1944.

HUBERT LANZÑGeneral der Gebirgstruppen (Lieutenant General, Mountain Troops); Commander 1st Mountain Division October 1940-January 1943; Commander XXII Mountain Army Corps, August 1943-October 1944.

ERNST DEHNERÑGeneral der Infanterie (Lieutenant General, Infantry); Commander LXIX Army Reserve Corps, August 1943March 1944. ERNST VCiN LEYSERÑGeneral der Infanterie (Lieutenant General, Infantry); Commander XV Mountain Army Corps, November 1943-July 1944; Commander XXI Mountain Army Corps, July 1944-April 1945. WILHELM SPEIDE~General der Flieger (Lieutenant General Air Force); Commander Southern Greece, October 1942-September 1943; Military Commander Greece, September 1943~une 1944. KURT VON GEITNERÑGeneralmajor (Brigadier General); Chief of Staff to the Commanding General in Serbia, July 1942-August 1943; Chief of Staff to the Military Commander of Serbia and Military Commander Southeast, August 1943-October 1944. Reference is hereby made to the Appendix to this indictment for a fuller statement of the positions held by each of the defendants herein.

COUNT ONE

1. Between September 1939 and May 1945, all of the defendants unlawfully~ wilfully, and knowingly committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, as defined in Article II of Control Council Law No. 10, in that they were principals in, accessories to, ordered, abetted, took a consenting part in, were connected with plans and enterprises involving, and were members of organizations or groups connected with, the murder of hundreds of thousands of persons from the civilian populations of Greece, Yugoslavia~ and Albania, by troops of the German armed forces under the command and jurisdiction of, responsible to, and acting pursuant to orders issued, executed, and distributed by, the defendants herein. The victims of these crimes included persons from all walks of lif~ doctors, lawyers, clergymen, artists, teachers, laborers, farmersÑwho, regardless of age or sex, were rounded up from the streets, from their homes, or from their places of work, and placed in prison camps and stockades. When attacks by lawfully constituted enemy military forces, and attacks by unknown persons, against German troops and installations took place, these persons were, without benefit of investigation or trial, summarily hanged or shot. They were executed at arbitrarily established ratios varying from 50 to 100 for each German soldier killed and 25 to 50 for each German soldier wounded.

2. Other thousands of noncombatants, arbitrarily designated as "partisans," "Communists," "Communist suspects," "bandits," and "bandit suspects," also without benefit of investigation or trial, were terrorized, tortured, and murdered, in retaliation for attacks by lawfully constituted enemy military forces and attacks by unknown persons against German troops and installations.

3. These acts of collective punishment were part of a deliberate scheme of terror and intimidation, wholly unwarranted and unjustified by military necessity and in flagrant violation of the laws and customs of war, to compel the inhabitants of the aforementioned territories to furnish information concerning the size, strength, and disposition of their national armies, to reduce the manpower potential of the armies of resistance, and to decimate for future generations the native populations of these occupied territories.

4. Pursuant to, and in implementation of, this scheme of terror and intimidation, the defendants herein issued, executed, and distributed, to troops under their command and jurisdiction, orders for the execution of 100 "hostages" in retaliation for each German soldier killed, 50 "hostages" in retaliation for each German soldier wounded, 10 "hostages" in retaliation for each person under German protection killed, 5 "hostages" in retaliation for each person under German protection wounded, and up to 100 "hostages" in retaliation for each attack upon any "object" under German protection.

5. The murders and other crimes charged in this count included, but were not limited to, the following:

a. On or about 28 April 1941, the Commander in Chief of the 2d Army ordered the execution of 100 Serbs, taken from all classes of the population, in retaliation for the death of one German soldier and the wounding of two others, and publicly announced that "in the future 100 Serbs will be ruthlessly shot for Panzer Grenadier Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the LXVIII Infantry Corps, brutally murdered 215 persons, mostly old men, women, and children, in the village of Klissura, Greece, in retaliation for the death of two German soldiers killed in the neighborhood of that village by members of Greek "partisan" units.

b. On Ol about 10 June 1944, troops of the 4th SS (Police) Panzer Grenadier Regiment [Division], under the command and jurisdiction of the LXVIII Infantry Corps, shot and killed, in the village of Distomon, Greece, 300 "bandits" and "bandit suspects" and set the village on fire.

c. On or about 11 August 1944, in reprisal for an attack east of Kukes, Albania, in which two cars were set on fire, troops of the 21st SS "Skanderbeg" Division under the command and jurisdiction of the XXI Mountain Corps, hanged six "hostages" at the place of the attack.

d. On or about 15 August 1944, in Athens, Greece, troops under the eommand and jurisdiction of the Military Commander of Greece executed 200 Greek citizens and 100 "Communists" in retaliation for the death of the German Gene-al Krech.

6. The acts and conduct of the defendants set forth in this count were committed unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly, and constitute violations of international conventions, of the Hague Regulations 1907, of the laws and customs of war, of the general principles of criminal law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, of the internal penal laws of the countries in which such crimes were committed, and were declared, recognized, and defined as crimes by Article II of Control Council Law No. 10.

COUNT TWO

7. Between September 1939 and May 1945, all of the defendants unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, as defined in Article II of Control Council Law No. 10, in that they were principals in, accessories to, ordered, abetted, took a consenting part in, were connected with plans and enterprises involving, and were members of organizations or groups connected with, the plundering and looting of public and private property, the wanton destruction of cities, towns, and villages, frequently together with the murder of the inhabitants thereof, and the commission of other acts of devastation not justified by military necessity, in the occupied territories of Norway, Greece, Yugoslavia, and Albania, by troops of the German armed forces under the command and jurisdiction of, responsible to, and acting pursuant to orders issued, executed, and distributed by, the defendants herein. The defendants ordered troops under their command and jurisdiction to burn, destroy, and level to the ground entire villages and towns, and, on numerous occasions, to execute the inhabitants of such villages and towns. Such arbitrary, inhumane, and disproportionately harsh measures of reprisal dislocated hundreds of families, made thousands of peaceful noncombatar.ts homeless and destitute, and brought untold suffering, humiliation, misery, and death to vast numbers of innocent civilians.

8. This program of wholesale devastation was carried out not only as part of a cruel, senseless pacification-through-terror scheme, wholly unwarranted and unjustified by military necessity and in flagrant violation of the laws and customs of war, but also in furtherance of a long-range plan to despoil and retard for decades the economic and industrial potential of the occupied territories.

9. The acts of destruction and other crimes charged in this count included, but were not limited to, the following:

a. On or about 10 October 1944, the Commander in Chief of the 20th Mountain Army, the defendant Rendulic, issued an order, to troops under his command and jurisdiction, for the complete destruction of all shelter and means of existence in, and the total evacuation of the entire civilian population of, the northern Norwegian province of Finmark. During the months of October and November 1944, this order was effectively and ruthlessly carried out. For no compelling military reasons, and in literal execution of instructions to show no sympathy to the civilian population, the evacuated residents were made to witness the burning of their homes and possessions and the destruction of churches, public buildings, food supplies, barns, livestock, bridges, transport facilities, and natural resources of an area in which they and their families had lived for generations. Relatives and friends were separated, many of the evacuees became ill from cold and disease, hundreds died from exposure or perished at sea in the small boats and fishing smacks used in the evacuation, while still others were summarily shot for refusing to leave their homelandÑin all, the thoroughness and brutality of this evacuation left some 61,000 men, women, and children homeless, starving, and destitute.

b. On or about 25 September 1941, in Serbia, troops under the command and jurisdiction of the commanding general in Serbia were ordered to burn, and did burn, villages and farms in and around the plains of Drina and at the bend of the Sava River. c. During the months of September and October 1941, in the course of so-called "punitive expeditions" (Strafexpeditionen), troops under the command and jurisdiction of the 12th Army burned and completely destroyed the following villages in the Valjevo district of Serbia: Grabevica, Divci, Dracic, Jovanja, Selic, Loznica, Lukavac, Petnica, Popucke, Babjic, Susoke, Skela, Grabovac, Zabrizje, Stubline, Pricevic, and Beoluzevic.

d. On or about 15 August 1943, during the course of a reprisal raid south of Arilje, Serbia, troops under the command and jurisdiction of the commanding general in Serbia burned 460 houses.

e. On or about 24 September 1943, during the execution of "Action Kammerhofer," troops of the 173d Reserve Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the LXIX Reserve Corps, set fire to two Croatian villages.

f. On or about 5 October 1943, in retaliation for the murder of a regimental commander and for telephone "sabotage," troops under the command and jurisdiction of the XXII Mountain Corps destroyed the Greek village of Akmotopos and executed its entire population.

g. On or about 16 October 1943, troops of the 187th Reserve Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the LXIX Reserve Corps, arr~sted the inhabitants of the Croatian villages of Paklonica and Vocarica as "hostages" and then burned the villages to the ground.

h. On or about 15 November 1943, troops of the 187th Reserve Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the LXIX Reserve Corps, burned the village of ~amena, Croatia.

i. On or about 27 November 1943, troops of the 173d Reserve Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the LXIX Reserve Corps, burned the Croatian village of Grgurevci.

j. On or about 1 December 1943, in the course of retaliation activities against "bandits" in the district of Korca, Greece, troops under the command and jurisdiction and the XXII Mountain Corps destroyed one village and shot all of the able-bodied male inhabitants found therein.

k. On or about 15 December 1943, in the course of continuing retaliation activities in the district of Kalavritha, Greece, troops under the command and jurisdiction of the LXVIII Infantry Corps burned four villages, completely leveled Kalavritha, destroyed two convents, and executed 511 male "hostages."

l. During the period January 1944ÑMarch 1945, troops of the 392d Infantry Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the XXI Mountain Corps, burned, plundered, and looted the Croatian villages of Dreznica, Pisac, Tuzevic, and Vojvodersa.

m. On or about 28 March 1944, troops of the 7th SS "Prinz Eugen" Division under the command and jurisdiction of the 2d Panzer Army burned, plundered, and looted the Dalmatian villages of Otok, Ovrnje, Ruda, and Dolac Donji.

n. On or about 15 May 1944, troops under the command and jurisdiction of the LXVIII Infantry Corps burned fifty houses in the village of Kimi, Greece, in retaliation for an attack on a German truck.

o. On or about 11 July 1944, troops of the 369th "Devil's" Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the 2d Panzer Army, destroyed by fire the Croatian villages of Zagnjesde and Udora, executing the male population of those villages and transporting the female population to the concentration camp at Stolac, Croatia.

p. On or about 13 August 1944, pursuant to an order of the Commander in Chief Army Group F and Supreme Commander Southeast, the defendant Weichs, the Greek village of Karpenision was burned to the ground.

10. The acts and conduct of the defendants set forth in this count were committed unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly, and constitute violations of international Conventions, of the Hague Regulations 1907, of the laws and customs of war, of the general principles of criminal law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, of the internal penal laws of the countries in which such crimes were committed, and were declared, recognized, and defined as crimes by Article II of Control Council Law No. 10.

COUNT THREE

11. Between September 1939 and ~ay 1945, all of the defendants unlawfully, willfully and knowingly committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, as defined in Article II of Control Council Law No. 10, in that they were principals in, accessories to, ordered, abetted, took a consenting part in, were connected with plans and enterprises involving, and were members of organizations or groups connected with, the initiation and draMing of certain illegal orders, and their subsequent issuance and distribution to, and execution by, troop units of the German armed forces under the command and jurisdiction of, and responsible to, the defendants herein. Such illegal orders directed inter alia that enemy troops be refused quarter and be denied the status and rights of prisoners of war, and that surrendered members of the military forces of nations at war with Germany be summarily executed. Such illegal orders further directed that regular members of the national armies of Greece, Yugoslavia, and Italy be designated and treated by troops of the German armed forces subordinate to the defendants herein as "partisans," "rebels," "Communists," and "bandits," and that the relatives of the members of such national armies be held responsible for said members' lawful acts of warfare. These orders were carried out thoroughlY and ruthlessly, and as a result thousands of soldiers and prisoners of war were murdered and ill-treated.

12. The murders and other crimes ~harge~l in this count included, but were not limited to, the following:

a. On or about 28 April 1941, the Commander in Chief of the 2d Army issued and distributed, to troops under his command and jurisdiction, an order stating that "whoever appears in the Serbian uniform with a weapon in his hand transgresses international law and is to be shot to death immediately," that "if in any area (of Serbia) an armed band appears, then even the men capable of bearing arms who are seized are to be shot to death, because they were in the proximity of the band, if it cannot immediately be ascertained with certainty that they were not connected with the band," and, further, "that the bodies of all persons shot to death are to be hanged up and left hanging."

b. During a period of time after June 1941, all of the defendants herein issued, executed, and distributed, to troops under their command and jurisdiction, an order for the summary execution of political commissars, even though such persons were regularly attached to, and wore the recognized uniform of, members of the established military forces of enemy belligerents.

c. On or about 23 July 1941, the Commander in Chief 1~th Al my and Supreme Commander Southeast issued and distributed, to troops under his command and jurisdiction, an order to punish resistance in the occupied territories of Greece and Yugoslavia "not by legal prosecution of the guilty, but by spreading terror and applying draconic measures."

d. On or about 2 October 1941, the Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia ordered troops under his command and jurisdiction to execute 2,100 Yugoslavian prisoners of war in retaliation for the death of 21 German soldiers.

e. On or about 4 October 1941, the Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia issued an order to troops under his command and jurisdiction to give no quarter to members of the Yugoslav National Army.

f. On or about 14 October 1941, the Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia ordered troops under his command and jurisdiction to arrest all wives, and male relatives aged 15 years and over, of members of the Yugoslav National Army and to confine them in concentration camps.

g. On or about 2 November 1941, the Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia issued an order to troops under his command and jurisdiction to continue the practice of shooting, after a short interrogation, all "partisans" captured in combat.

h. During a period of time after 18 October 1942, all of the defendants herein, except the defendant List, issued, executed, and distributed to troops under their command and jurisdiction an order to execute in battle. Ol within 24 houls aftel capture, all members of Allied "commando" and "military mission" units, whether or not such persons were regularly attached to, and wore the recognized uniform of duly authorized members of the established military forces of enemy belligerents.

i. On or about 11 September 1943, the Commandel in Chief and the Chief of Sta~ of Army Group F and Supreme Command Southeast, the Commander in Chief 2d Panzer Army, the commanders of the LXVIII Infantry Corps, XXII Mountain Corps, LXIX Reserve Corps, and XV Mountain Corps, and the military commander of Serbia, and Military Commander Southeast, issued, executed, and distributed to troops under their command and jurisdiction an order for the execution of one staff officer and 10 men of each division of the surrendered Italian Army which, prior to its surrender, had sold, given away, or destroyed its weapons, and for the execution of one officer and 10 men of each such division which, prior to its surrender, had made a motor vehicle unusable.

j. On Ol about 24 September 1943, the Commander of the XXII Mountain Corps ordered troops under his command and jurisdiction to execute the captured Italian General Gandin, and all offlcers of his staff.

k. On or about 28 September 1943, in Croatia, troops under the command and jurisdiction of the 2d Panzer Army executed 300 captured officers of the Italian "Bergamo" Division.

1. On or about 1 Novembel 1943, tlOOpS of the 100th Jaegel Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the 2d Panzer Army, executed two captured colonels, the operations and supply officers, respectively, of the Italian 9th Army.

13. The acts and conduct of the defendants set forth in this count were committed unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly and constitute violations of international conventions, of the Hague Regulations 1907, of the Prisoner of War Convention (Geneva 1929), of the laws and customs of war, of the general principles of criminal law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, of the internal penal laws of the countries in which such crimes were committed, and were declared, recognized, and defined as crimes by Article II of Control Council Law No. 10.

COUNT FOUR

14. Between September 1939 and May 1945, all of the defendants unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly committed war crimes and crimes against humanity, as defined in Article II of Control Council Law No. 10, in that they were principals in, accessories to, ordered, abetted, took a consenting part in, were connected with plans and enterprises involving, and were members of organizations or groups connected with, the murder, torture, and systematic terrorization, imprisonment in concentration camps, arbitrary forced labor on fortifications and entrenchments to be used by the enemy, and deportation to slave labor, of the civilian populations of Greece, Yugoslavia, and Albania, by troops of the German Armed Forces under the command and jurisdiction of, responsible to, and acting pursuant to orders issued, executed, and distributed by, the defendants herein. Great numbers of citizensÑ"democrats, nationalists, Jews, and gypsies"Ñwere arbitrarily seized and thrown into concentration camps where they were systematically beaten, tortured, ill-treated, and murdered, while other masses of the civilian population were forcibly conscripted for labor in the Reich and the occupied territories, transported in trains without adequate heat or sanitary conditions, and there, separated from family and friends, were made to labor long hours under inhumane conditions.

15. The murders, imprisonment in concentration camps, deportation to slave labor, and other crimes charged in this count included, but were not limited to, the following:

a. On or about 23 September 1941, troops of the 342d Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the XVIII Mountain Corps, were ordered to place the entire male population, between the ages of 14 and 70, of the town of Sabac, Serbia, in a concentration camp.

b. On or about 6 October 1941, the Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia ordered troops of the 342d Infantry Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the XVIII Mountain Corps, to clear the district south of Mitrovica and northeast of Ravnje of its entire population and to erect in the nearby town of Zasaviza a concentration camp capable of accommodating 30,000 persons.

c. On or about 11 October 1941, the Plenipotentiary Commanding General in Serbia ordered the execution of 2,200 Jews from a concentration camp in ~elgrade, Yugoslavia.

d. On or about 10 August 1943, the Chief of Staff Army Group E and Supreme Command Southeast issued, executed, and distributed to troops subordinate to that command an order to deport the male population of whole villages in the occupied territories of Greece and Yugoslavia for forced labor in Germany, and "to answer attacks on German soldiers and damage to German property in all cases by the shooting or hanging of hostages, the destruction of surrounding villages, etc."

e. On or about 30 November 1943, during "Aktion Hafenfahrt," troops of the 100th Jaeger Division, under the command and jurisdiction of the 2d Panzer Army, were ordered to arrest and deport to the concentration camp at Semlin all "Communists" in the Albanian cities of Durazzo and Shijeb.

f. On or about 2 December 1943, the Commandel in Chief of the 2d Panzer Army ordered troops under his command and jurisdiction engaged in the Operation "Panther" to evacuate the male population of Croatian towns and villages for deportation to forced labor in Germany.

g. On or about 3 December 1943, during Operation "Panther," the Commander of the ~V Mountain Corps ordered troops under his command and jurisdiction to deport the able-bodied population of numerous Croatian villages to Germany for forced labor.

16. The acts and conduct of the defendants set forth in this count were committed unlawfully, willfully, and knowingly and constitute violations of international conventions, of the Hague Regulations 1907, of the laws and customs of war, of the general principles of criminal law as derived from the criminal laws of all civilized nations, of the internal penal laws of the countries in which such crimes were committed, and were declared, recognized, and defined as crimes by article II of Control Council Law No. 10.

Wherefore, this indictment is filed with the Secretary General of the Military Tribunals and the charges herein made against the above-named defendants are hereby presented to tlle Military Tribunals.

B. Sentences

The reading of the opinion and judgment having been concluded, the Tribunal will now impose sentence upon those defendants who have been adjudged guilty in these proceedings. As the name of each defendant is called, he vrill arise, proceed to the center of the dock and put on the earphones. The defendant Wilhelm List will arise.

WILHELM LIST, on the counts of the indictment on which you have been convicted, the Tribunal sentences you to life imprisonment. You will retire with the guards.

WALTER KUNTZE. Walter Kuntze, on the counts of the indictment on which you have been convicted, the Tribunal sentences you to life imprisonment. You will retire with the guards.

LOTHAR RENDULIC. Lothar Rendulic, on the counts of the indictment on which you have been convicted, the Tribunal sentences you to 20 years of imprisonment. It is the order of the Tribunal that you will receive credit upon your sentence for the time already spent in confinement and pending trial, namely, from 13 September 1946. You will retire with the guards.

ERNST DEHNER. Ernst Dehner, Oll th~ count of the indictment on which you have been convicted, the Tribunal sentences you to 7 years of imprisonment. It is the order of the Tribunal that you receive credit upon your sentence for the time already spent in confinement and peliding trial, namely, from 29 December 1946 You will retire with the guards.

ERNST VON LEYSER. Ernst von Leyser, on the counts of the indictment on which you have been convicted the Tribunal sentences you to 10 years of imprisonment. It is the order of the Tribunal that you receive credit upon your sentence for the time already spent in confinement and pending trial, namely, from 18 December 1946. You will retire with the guards.

HUBERT LANZ. Hubert Lanz, on the counts of the indictmenl on which you have been convicted the Tribunal sentences you to 12 years of imprisonment. It is the order of the Tribunal that you receive credit upon your sentence for the time already spent in confinement and pending trial, namely, from 17 January 1947. You will retire with the guards.

HELMUTH FELMY. Helmuth Felmy, on the counts of the indictment on which you have been convicted the Tribunal sentences you to 15 years of imprisonment. It is the order of the Tribunal that you receive credit upon your sentence for the time already spent in confinement and pending trial, namely, from 4 January 1947. You will retire with the guards.

WILHELM SPEIDEL. Wilhelm Speidel, on the count of the indictment on which you have been convicted the Tribunal sentences you to 20 years of imprisonment. It is the order of the Tribunal that you receive credit upon your sentence for the time already spent in confinement and pending trial, namely, from 13 December 1946. You will retire with the guards.

The defendants HERMANN FOERTSCH and KURT VON GEITNER having been acquitted, shall be discharged from custody by the Marshal when the Tribunal presently adjourns. They will retire with the guards.

The Tribunal now stands adjourned without delay.