
audiobook
by United States. Office of Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality
In the immediate aftermath of World War II, a monumental legal effort began to hold the architects of the Nazi regime accountable. This volume follows the painstaking work of the Office of Chief Counsel as it combed through a flood of captured records—secret caches hidden in Bavarian castles, art‑loot inventories sealed in Austrian salt mines, and thousands of pages from the German Foreign Office and military headquarters. Listeners will hear how investigators sifted more than one hundred thousand documents to isolate the few thousand that could bear the weight of the indictment for conspiracy and aggression.
The narrative also reveals the unprecedented challenges of building a case where no legal precedent existed, illustrating the balance between exhaustive research and the urgent need to bring the trial to a close. By presenting the most compelling pieces of evidence, the book offers a vivid glimpse into the foundations of modern international law and the extraordinary lengths taken to ensure that the truth could be heard in the historic Nuremberg courtroom.
Language
en
Duration
~42 hours (2441K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Larry Harrison, Cindy Beyer, and the online Project Gutenberg team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net with images provided by TIA-US.
Release date
2017-08-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Created to help build the case at Nuremberg, this U.S. government office assembled one of the most important documentary records of Nazi crimes and aggression. Its books read less like a conventional history and more like the evidence file behind a landmark war-crimes prosecution.
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