The technical preparations have come to such a point that experiments on human beings can be started within a reasonable space of time.
"An SS Standartenfuehrer Dr. Lolling informed me, the concentration camp Weimar-Buchenwald has been directed to make available 5 prisoners for SS Sturmbannfuehrer Varnet's experiments. These prisoners will be made available to SS Sturmbannfuehrer Varnet by the camp physician at any tine.
"SS Sturmbannfuehrer Varnet intends to go to Buchenwald shortly in order to make certain necessary preliminary tests on these prisoners. In case there will be special laboratory tests, you are requested to assist Varnet within the scope of your possibilities.
"Particulars on Varnet's research were sent today to the camp physician of the Weimar-Buchenwald for his information."
There is evidence that during the summer of 1944 Dr. Varnet conducted the experiments referred to in Poppendick's letter. However, the nationality of the prisoners used for the experiments is not shown, nor has it been proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the experiments were harmful or caused death, or injury to the experimental subjects.
be have given careful consideration to the evidence concerning the charges made by the Prosecution against the defendant Poppendick. Certainly the evidence raises a strong suspicion that he was involved in the experiments. He at least had notice of them and of their consequences. He knew also that they were being carried on by the SS of which he was and remained a member.
But this Tribunal, however, cannot convict-Upon mere suspicion; evidence beyond a reasonable doubt is necessary.
The evidence is insufficient to sustain guilt under Counts Two and Three of the Indictment.
MEMBERSHIP IN A CRIMINAL ORGANIZATION:
The defendant Poppendick is charged with membership in an organization declare criminal by the Judgment of the International Military Tribunal, namely; the SS. Poppendick joined the SS in July 1952. He remained in the SS voluntarily throughout the war, with actual knowledge of the fact that that organization was being used for the commission of acts now declared criminal by Control Council Law No, 10. He must, therefore, be found guilty under Count Pour of the Indictment.
With reference to the nature of punishment which should be imposed under such circumstances the International military Tribunal has made the following recommendation:
"1. That so far as possible throughout the four zones of occupation in Germany the classifications; sanctions; and penalties be standardized. Uniformity of treatment so far ac practical should be a basic principle. This does not of course, mean that discretion in sentencing should not be vested in the court; but the discretion should be within fixed limits appropriate to the crime.
"2. Law No. 10 ... leaves punishment entirely in the discretion of the trial court even to the extent of inflicting the death penalty.
"The Denazification law of 5 March 1946; however; passed for Bavaria; Greater Hesse; end Wurttemberg-Gadem; provides definite sentences for punishment in each type of offense. TLie Tribunal recommends that in no case should punishment imposed under Law No. 10 upon any members of an organization or group declared by the Tribunal to be criminal exceed the punishment fixed by the DeNazification Law.
No person should be punished under both laws."
See Trial of the Major War Criminals Vol.
1, p. 257.
In weighing the punishment, if any, which should be meted out to the defendant for his guilt by reason of the charge contained in Count Four of the Indictment, this Tribunal will give such consideration to the recommendations of the International Military Tribunal as may under the premises seem meet and proper.
C 0 N C L U S I 0 N Military Tribunal I finds the defendant Helmut Poppendick not guilty under Counts Two and Three of the Indictment; and finds and adjudges the defendant Helmut Poppendick guilty as charged in the Fourth Count of the Indictment.
Judge Sebring will continue reading the judgment.
JUDGE SEBRING:
SIEVERS The defendant Sievers is charged under Counts Two and Three of the Indictment with special responsibility for, and participation in, High Altitude, Freezing, Malaria, Lost Gas, Seawater, Epidemic Jaundice, and spotted Fever experiments; and with extermination of Jews to complete a skeleton collection.
Under Count Four of the Indictment he is charged with being a member of an organization declared criminal by the Judgment of the International Military Tribunal; namely, the SS.
The Prosecution has abandoned the charge of participation in the Epidemic Jaundice experiments, and hence, this charge will not be considered further.
Sievers is one of the three defendants who are not physicians. He joined the NSDAP in 1923 and renewed his membership in the Nazi Party in 1933.
He joined the SS at the end of 1935 on the suggestion of Himmler. In this organization he attained the rank of a Standartenfuehrer (Colonel).
From 1 July 1335 until the war ended Sievers was a member of Himmler's personal staff and Reich Business Manager of the Ahnenerbe Society, according to a statute of 1 January 1939, the purpose of the Ahnenerbe was to support scientific research concerning the culture and heritage of the Nordic race. The Board of Directors was composed of Himmler, as president. Dr. quest, as Curator, and Sievers, as the Business manager. Sievers was responsible for the business organization and administration and the budget of the Ahnenerbe. The place of business was Berlin. Sievers supported and participated in the medical experiments which are the subject of the indictment, primarily through the Institute of military Scientific Research which was established by order of Himmler, dated 7 July 1942 and was administratively attacked to the Ahnenerbe.
On 1 January 1942 Himmler ordered the establishment of an entomological institute; in March 1942 the institute Dr. Rascher in Dachau; and in the first month of the year 1942, the institute Dr. Hirt at Strassbourg. These subsequently became part of the Institute for military Scientific Research.
Sievers was, for all practical purposes, the acting head of the Ahnenerbe. In this capacity he was subordinated to Himmler and regularly reported to him on the affairs of this Society. The top secret correspondence of Himmler concerning the Ahnenerbe was sent to Sievers. The charter of the Ahnenerbe defines Sievers' duties as follows:
"The Reich business manager handles the easiness affairs of the community, he is in charge of the easiness organization and administration. He is responsible for one drawing up of the budget and for the administration of the treasury."
Sievers was responsible for the entire administrative problems of the secretary's office, bookkeeping and treasury. Besides that he also had to manage the Ahnenerbe-Publishlng House. In June 1943 Professor Dr. Mentzel, who among other things was Chief of the Business Managing advisory Council of the Reich Research Council, appointed Sievers as his deputy. By this act Sievers did not become a member of the Reich Research Council but held only an honorary position.
In a letter to the defendant Rudolf Brandt, dated 28 January 1945 Sievers defines his position as Reich Business Manager of the Ahnenerbe as follows:
"My duty merely consists in smoothing the way for the research men and seeing that the tasks ordered by the Reichsfuehrer-SS are carried out in the quickest possible way. On one thing I certainly can form an opinion; that is, one who is doing the quickest job."
Sievers received orders directly from Himmler on matters of research assignments for the Ahnenerabe and he reported directly to Himmler on such experiments. Sievers devoted his efforts to obtaining the funds, materials and equipment needed by the research workers. The materials obtained by Sievers included concentration camp to be used as experimental subjects. When the experiments were under way, Sievers made certain that they were being performed in a satisfactory manner. In this connection, Sievers necessarily exercised his own independent judgment and had to familiarize himself with the details of such assignments.
HIGH ALTITUDE EXPERIMENTS:
The details of these experiments are discussed in other portions of this Judgment. Sievers' activities in the high altitude experiments are revealed clearly by the evidence.
Rascher in a letter to Himmler dated 5 April 1942 states as follows:
"SS-0bersturmbannfuehrer Sievers took a whole day off to watch some of the interesting standard experiments and may have given you a brief report... I am very much indebted to Obersturmbannfuehrer Sievers as he has shown a very active interest in my work in every respect."
Sievers admitted that he reported to Himmler about his visit to Dachau. On the basis of the reports of Sievers and Rascher, Himmler authorized Rascher to continue the high altitude experiments in Dachau; in the course of which the evidence shows that 180 to 200 inmates were experimented upon; that 70 to 80 of them died. Rascher became associated with the ahnenerbe in March 1942 and during the entire time covered by the period bf the high altitude experiments Rascher was attached to the Ahnenerbe and performed the high altitude experiments with its assistance, On 20 July 1942, when the final report on high altitude experiments was submitted to Himmler; Rascher's name appeared on the letterhead of the Ahnenerbe Institute for Military Scientific Research as shown by the cover letter; and the inclosed report bore the statement that the experiments had been carried out.
in con conjunction with the Reserch and Instruction Association "Das Ahnenerbe". Sievers had actual knowledge of the criminal aspects of the Rascher experiments. He was notified that Dachau inmates were to be used. He himself inspector the experiments. He himself inspected the experiments. Sievers admitted that Racher told him that several died as a result of the high altitude experiments.
Under these facts Sievers is specially chargeable with- the criminal aspects of these experiments.
FREEZING EXPERIMENTS:
Before the high altitude experiments had actually been completed freezing experiments were ordered to be performed at Dachau. They were conducted from August 1943 to the early part of 1943 by Rolzloehner, Finke, and Rascher, all of whom w re officers in the Radical Services of the Luftwaffe. Details of the freezing experiments have bean given elsewhere in this Judgment.
In May 1943 Rascher was transferred to the Waffen-SS and then proceeded alone o conduct freezing experiments in Dachau until May 1945. Rascher advised the defendant Rudolf Brandt that Roles and Russians had been used as subjects.
The witness Neff testified that the defendant Sievers visited the experimental station quite frequently during the freezing experiments. He testified further that in September 1942 he received orders to take the hearts and lungs of 5 experimental subjects killed in the experiments to Professor Hirt in Strasbourg for further scientific study; that the travel warrant for the trip was made out by Sievers; and that the Ahnenerbe Society paid the expenses for the transfer of the bodies. One of the 3 experimental subjects killed was a Dutch citizen.
Neff's testimony is corroborated in large part by the affidavits of the defendants Rudolf Brandt and Becker-Freyseng, by the testimony of the witnesses Lutz, Michalewsky, and Vieweg, and by the documentary evidence in the record.
In the Siever's Diary, there are numerous instances of Sievers' activities in the aid of Rascher. On 1 February 1943 Sievers noted efforts in obtaining apparatus, implements, and chemicals for Rascher's experiments. On the 6th and 21st of January 1944 Sievers noted the problem of location. rascher reported to Sievers periodically concerning the status and details of the freezing experiments.
It is plain from the record that the relationship of Sievers and Rascher in the performance of freezing experiments required Sievers to make the preliminary arrangements for the performance of the experiments, to familiarize himself with the progress of the experiments by personal inspection, to furnish necessary equipment and material, including human beings used during the freezing experiments to receive and make progress reports concerning Rascher, and to handle the matter of evaluation and publication of such reports. Basically, such activities constituted a performance of his duties as defined by Sievers in his letter of 28 January 1943 to Rudolf Brandt in which he stated that he smoothed the way for research workers and saw to it that Himmler's orders were carried out.
Under those facts Sievers in chargeable with the criminal activities in these experiments.
MALARIA EXPERIMENTS:
Details of these experiments are given elsewhere in this judgment. These experiments were performed at Dachau by Schilling and Ploetner. The evidence shows that Sievers had knowledge of the nature and purpose of these criminal enterprises and supported them in his official position.
LOST GAS EXPERIMENTS:
These experiments were conducted in the Natzweiler Concentration Camp under the supervision of Professor Hirt of the University of Strasbourg.
The Ahnenerbe Society, and the defendant Sievers supported this research on behalf of the SS. The arrangements for the payment of the research subsides of the ahnenerbe was made by Sievers. The defendant Silvers participated in these experiments by actively collaborating with the defendants Karl Brandt and Rudolf Brandt, and with Hirt and his principal assistant, Dr. Wimmer. The record shows that Sievers was in correspondence with Hirt at least as early as January 1 42, and that he established contact between Himmler and Hirt.
In a letter of 11 September 1942 to Gluecks, Sievers wrote that the necessary conditions existed in Natzweiler "for carrying out our military scientific research work." He requested that Gluecks issue the necessary authorization for Hirt. Wimmer and Misselback to enter Natzweiler, and that provision be made for their board and accommodation. The letter also stated:
"The experiments which arc to be performed on prisoners arc to be carried out in four rooms of an already existing medical barrack. Only slight changes in the construction of buildings are required, in particular the installation of a hood which can be produced with very little material. In accordance with attached plan of the construction management at Natzweiler, I r quest that necessary orders be issued to same to carry out the reconstruction. All the expenses arising out of our activity at Natzweiler will be covered by this office."
In a memorandum on 3 November 1942 to the defendant Rudolf Brandt, Sievers complained about certain difficulties which had arisen in Natzweiler because of the lack of cooperation from the camp officials. He seemed particularly outraged by the fact that the camp officials were asking that the experimental prisoners be paid for. A portion of the memorandum follows:
"Then I think of our military research work conducted at the Concentration Camp Dachau, I must praise and call special attention to the generous and understanding was in which our work was furthered there and to the cooperation were were given. Payments for prisoners was never discussed. It seems as if at Natzweiler they are trying to make as much money as possible out of this matter.
We are not conducting those experiments, as a matter of fact, for the sake of some fixed scientific idea, but to be of practical help to the armed forces and beyond that, to the German people in a possible emergency."
Brandt was requested to give his help in a comradely fashion in setting up the necessary conditions at Natzweiler. The defendant Rudolf Brandt replied to this memorandum on 3 December 1942, and told Sievers that he had had occasion to speck to Pohl concerning these difficulties, and that they would be remedied.
The testimony of the witness Roll was that approximately 220 inmates of Russian, Polish, Czech and German nationality wore experimented upon by Hirt and his collaborators, and that approximately died. None of the experimental subjects volunteered. During the entire period of those experiments Hirt was associated with the Ahnenerbe society.
In early 194 Hirt and hammer summarized their findings from the Lost experiments in a report entitled "Proposed Treatment of poisoning caused by Lost." The report was described as from the Institute for Military Scientific Research, Department H of the Ahnenerbe, located at the Strasbourg Anatomical Institute. Light, medium, and heavy injuries due to Lost gas are mentioned. Sievers received several copies of this reports. On 31 March 1944, after Karl Brandt had received a Fuehrer Decree giving him broad powers in the field of chemical warfare, Sievers informed Brandt about Hirt's work and gave him a copy of the report. This is proved by Siever's letter to Rudolf Brandt on 11 April 1911. Karl Brandt admitted that the wording of the report made it clear that experiments had been conducted on human beings.
Sievers testified that on 25 January 1913 he went to natzweiler concentration camp and consulted with the camp authorities concerning the arrangements to be made for Hirt's lost experiments. These arrange ments included the obtaining of laboratories and experimental subjects Sievers testified that the Lost experiments were harmful.
On the visit of 25 January 1943, Sievers saw ton persons who had been subjected to Last experiments and watched Hirt change the bandages on one of the persons. Sievers testified that in March 1943 he asked Hirt whether any of the experimental subjects had suffered harm from the experiments and was told by Hirt that two of the experimental subjects had died due to ether causes.
It is evident that Sievers was criminally connected with these experiments.
SEA WATER EXPERIMENTS.
These experiments were conducted at Dabhau from July through September 1944. Details of these experiments are explained elsewhere in the judgment.
The function of the Ahnenerbe in the performance of sea water experiments conducted at Dachau from July through September 1944, was chiefly in connection with the furnishing of space and equipment for the experiments. Sievers made those necessary arrangement on behalf or the Ahnenebe. As result of Schroeder's request to Himmler though Grawitz for permission to perform the sea water experiments on inmates on Dachau, Himmler directed on 8 July 1911 that the experiments be made on Gypsies and the other persons with other racial qualities as control subjects. Sievers was advised by Himmler's office of the above authorization for experiments as the Rascher station at Dachau.
On 27th of June 1944, Rascher was replaced by Ploetner as head of the Ahnenerbe Society for Military Scientific Research at Dachau. flavors, on the 20th of July, went to Dachau and conferred with Ploetner of the Ahnenerbe Society and the defendant Reiglboeck, who was to perform the experiments, concerning the execution of the sea water experiments, and the availability of working space for them. Sievers agreed to supply working space in Ploetner's Department and at the Ahnenerbe Entemological Institute.
On the 26th of July 1944, Sievers made a written report to Grawitz concerning details of his conference at Dachau. Sievers wrote that 40 experimental subjects could be accommodated at "our" research station, that the Ahnenerbe would supply a laboratory, and that Dr. Ploetner would give bis assistance, help and advice to the Luftwaffe physicians performing the experiments. Sievers also stated the number and assignment of the personnel to be employed, estimating that the work would cover a period of three weeks and designated 23 July 1966 as the date of commencement, provided that experimental persons were available, and the camp commander had received the necessary order from Himmler. In conclusion, Sievers expressed his hope that the arrangements which he had made would permit a successful conduct of the experiments and requested Tint acknowledgment be made to Himmler as a participant in the experiments.
In his testimony Sievers admitted that he had written the above left r and had conferred with Reiglboeck at Dachau. As the letter indicates, Sievers knew that concentration camp inmates were to be used.
Sievers had knowledge cf and criminally participated in Sea Mater experiments.
TYPHUS EXPERIMENTS:
Detailed description of these experiments is contained elsewhere in this Judgment. Sievers participated in the criminal typhus experiments conducted by Haagen on concentration camp inmates at Natzweiler by making the necessary arrangements in connection with securing experimental subjects, handling administrative problems incident to the experiments, and by furnishing the Ahnenerbe station with its equipment in Natzweiler for their performance.
On 16 August 1963, when Haagen was preparing to transfer his typhus experiments from Schirmack to Nabzweiler, he requested Sievers to make available a hundred concentration camp inmates for his research.
This is seen from a letter of 30 September 1943 from Sievers to Haagen in which he states that he will be glad to assist, and that he is accordingly contacting the proper source to have the "desired personnel" placed at Haagen's disposal. As a result of Sievers' efforts, a hundred inmates were shipped from Auschwitz to Natzweiler for Hagen's experiments. These were found to be unfit for experimentation, because of their pitiful physical condition. A second group of one hundred was then made available. Some of these were used by Haagen as experimental subjects.
That the experiments were carried out in the Ahnenerbe experimental station in Natzweiler, is proved by excerpts from monthly reports of the camp doctor in Natzweiler. A number of deaths occurred among non-German experimental subjects, as a direct result of the treatment to which they were subjected.
POLYGAL EXPERIMENTS:
Evidence had been introduced during the course of the trial to show that experiments to test the efficacy of a blood coagulant "polygal" was conducted on Dachau inmates by Rascher. The Sievers' Diary shows that the defendant had knowledge of activities concerning the production of polygal, and that he lent his support to the conduct of the experiments.
JEWISH SKELETON COLLECTION:
Sievers is charged under the Indictment with participation in the killing of 112 Jews who were selected to complete a skeleton collection for the Reich University of Strasbourg.
Responding to a request by the defendant Rudolf Brandt, Sievers submitted to him on 9 February 1942 a report by Dr. Hirt of the University of Strasbourg on the desirability of securing a Jewish Skeleton collection. In this report, Hirt advocated outright murder of "Jewish Bolshevik Commissars" for the procurement of such a collection. On 27 February 1942 Rudolf Brant informed Sievers that Himmler would support Hirt's work and would place everything necessary at his disposal. Brandt asked Sievers to inform Hirt' accordingly and to report again on the subject. On 2 November 1942 Sievers requested Brandt to make the necessary arrangements with the Reich Main Security Office for providing 150 Jewish inmates from Auschwitz to carry out this plan. On 6 November Brandt informed Adolf Eichmann, the Chief of Office IV-B--4 (Jewish Affairs) of the Reich Main Security Office to put everything at Hirt's disposal which was necessary for the completion of the skeleton collection.
From Siever's letter to Michmann of 21 June 1943, it is apparent that SS Hauptsturmfuehrer Bager, a collaborator of the Ahnenerbe Society carried out the preliminary work for the assembling of the skeleton collection in the Auschwitz Concentration Camp on 79 Jews, 30 Jewesses, 2 Poles, and 4 Asiatics. The corpses of the victims were sent in three shipments to the Anatomical institute of Hirt in the Strasbourg University.
When the Allied Armies were threatening to overrun Strasbourg early in September 1944, Sievers dispatched to Rudolf Brandt the following teletype message:
"Subject: Collection of Jewish Skeletons "In conformity with the proposal of 9 February 1942 and with the consent of 23 February 1942... SS-Sturmbaunfuehrer Professor Hirt planned the hitherto missing collection of skeletons. Due to the extent of the scientific work connected herewith, the preparation of the skeletons is not yet concluded.
Hirt asks with respect to the time needed for 30 specimens, and in case the endangering of Strasbourg has to be reckoned with, how to proceed with the collection situated in the dissecting-room of the anatomical institute. He is able to carry out the maceration and thus render them irrecognizable. The, however, part of the entire work would have been partly done in vain, and it would be a great scientific loss for this unique collection, because hominit casts could not be made afterwards. The skeleton collection as such is not conspicuous. Viscera could be declared as remnants of corpses, apparently left in the anatomical institute by the French, and ordered to be cremated. Decision on the following proposals is requested:
1) Collection can be preserved.
2) Collection is to be partly dissolved.
3) Entire collection is to be dissolved.
Sievers" The pictures of the corpses and the dissecting rooms of the Institute, taken by the French authorities after the liberation of Strasbourg, point up the grim story of these deliberate murders to which Sievers was a party.
Sievers knew from the first moment he received Hirt's report of 9 February 1942 that mass murder was planned for the procurement of the skeleton collection. Nevertheless he actively collaborated in the project, sent an employee of the Ahnenerbe to make the preparatory selections in the concentration camp at Auschwitz, and provided for the transfer of the victims from Auschwitz to Natzweiler.
He made arrangements that the collection be destroyed.
Sievers' guilt under this specification is shown without question.
Sievers offers two purported defenses to the charges against him: (1) That he acted pursuant to superior orders; (2) That he was a member of a resistance movement.
The first defense is wholly without merit. There is nothing to show that in the commission of these ghastly crimes Sievers acted entirely pursuant to orders. True, the basic policies or projects which he carried through were decided upon by his superiors, but in the execution of the details Sievers had an unlimited power of discretion. The defendant says that in his position he could not have refused an assignment. The fact remains that the record shows the case of several men who did, and who have lived to tell about it.
Sievers' second matter of defense is equally untenable. In support of the defense Sievers offered evidence by which he hoped to prove that as early as 1933 be became a member of secret resistance movement which plotted to overthrow the Nazi Government and to assassinate Hitler and Himmler; that as a leading member of the group, Sievers obtain d the appointment as Reich Business Manager of the Ahnenerbe so that he could be close to Himmler and observe his movements; that in this positron he became enmeshed in the revolting cremes, the subject matter of thin indictment; that he remained as Business Manager upon advice of his resistance leader to gain vital information which would hasten the day of the overthrow of the Nazi Government, and the liberation of the helpless peoples coming under its domination.
Assuming ail these things to be true, we cannot see how they may be used as a defense for Sievers. The fact remains that murders wore committed with co-operation of the Ahnenerbe against countless thousands of wretched concentration camp inmates who had not the Case 1 slightest means of resistance.
Sievers directed the program by which these murders were committed.
It certainly is not the law that a resistance worker can commit no crime, and least of all, against the very people he is supposed to be protecting.
MEMBERSHIP IN CRIMINAL ORGANIZATION:
Under Count Four of the Indictment; Wolfram Sievers is charged with being a member of an organization declared criminal by the Judgment of the International Military Tribunal, namely; the SS. The Evidence shows that Wolfram Sievers became a member of the SS in 935 and remained a member of that organization to the end of the war. As a member of the SS he was criminally implicated in the commission of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity; as charged under Counts Two and Three of the Indictment.
CONCLUSION Military Tribunal I finds and adjudges the defendant Wolfram Sievers guilty under Counts Two, Three and Four of the Indictment.
ROSE:
The defendant Rose is charged with special responsibility for, and participation in typhus and epidemic jaundice experiments.
The latter charge has been abandoned by the Prosecution.
Evidence was offered concerning, Rose's criminal participation in malaria experiments at Dachau; although he was not named in the indictment as one of the defendants particularly charged with criminal responsibility in connection with malaria experiments. Questions presented by this situation will be discussed later.
The defendant Rose is a physician of large experience; for many years recognized as an expert in tropical diseases. He studied medicine at the Universities of Berlin and Braslau, and was admitted to practice in the fall of 1921. After serving as interne in several medical institutes, he received an appointment on the staff of the Robert Koch Institute in Berlin.
Later he served on the staff of Heidelberg University and for three year., engaged in the private practice of medicine in Heidelberg. In 1929 he went to China, where he remained until 1936, occupying important positions as medical adviser to the Chinese Government. In 1936 he returned to Germany and became head of the Department for Tropical Medicine at the Robert Foch Institute in Berlin. Late in August 1939 He joined the Luftwaffe with the rank of First Lieutenant in the Medical Corps. In that service he was commissioned Brigadier General in the Reserve and continued on active duty until the end. of the war. He was Consultant on Hygiene and Tropical Medicine to the Chief of the Medical Service of the Luftwaffe. From 1944 he was also Consultant on the staff of defendant Handloser and was medical adviser to Dr. Conti in matters pertaining to tropical diseases. During the war Rose devoted practically all of his time to his duties as Consultant to the Chief of the Medical Service of the Luftwaffe, Hippke, and after 1 January 1944, the defendant Schroeder.
MALARIA EXPERIMENTS:
Medical experiments in connection with malaria were carried on at Dachau concentration camp from February 1942 until the end of the war. These experiments were conducted under Dr. Klaus Schilling for the purpose of discovering a method of establishing immunity against malaria. During the course of the experiments probably as many as 1,000 inmates of the concentration camp were used as subjects of the experiments. Very many of these persons were nationals of countries other than Germany, who did not volunteer for the experiments. By credible evidence it is established that approximately 30 of the experimental subjects died as a direct result of the experiments and that many more succumbed from causes directly flowing from the experiments, including non-German nationals.
With reference to Rose's participation in these experiments the record shows the following: The defendant Rose had been acquainted with Schilling for a number of years, having been his successor in a position once held by Schilling in the Robert Koch Institute. Under date 3 February 1941, Rose writing to Schilling, then in Italy, referred to a letter received from Schilling, in which the latter requested "malaria spleens" ( Spleens taker from the bodies of persons who had died from malaria ), Rose in reply asked for information concerning the exact nature of the material desired. Schilling wrote 4 April 1942 from Dachau to Rose at Berlin, stating that he had inoculated a person intracutaneously with Sperecoides from the salivary glands of a female anopheles which Rose had sent him. The letter continues:
"For the second inocculation I miss the Sperecoides material because I do not possess the "Strain Rose" in the anopheles yet. If you could find it possible to send me in the next days a few anopheles infected with "Strain Rose" (with the last consignment two out of ten mosquitoes were infected) I would have the possibility to continue this experiment and I would naturally be very thankful to you for this new support of my work.
"The mosquito breeding and the experiments proceed satisfactorily and I am working now on six tertiary strains."
The letter boars the Handwritten endorsement, "finished" 17 April 1942. L.g. RO 17/4,' which evidence clearly reveals that Rose had c plied with Schilling's request for material.
Schilling again wrote Rose from Dachau Malaria Station 3 July 1943, thanking Rose for this letter and "the consignment of atroparvus eggs." The letter continues:
"Five per cent of them brought on water went down and were therefore unfit for development; the rest of them hatched almost 100 per cent.
"Thanks to your solicitude, achieved again: the completion of my breed.
"Despite this fact I accept with great pleasure your offer to send me your excess of eggs. how did you dispatch this consignment: The result could not have been any better.
"Please tell Fraulein Lange, who apparently takes care of her breed with greater skill and batter success than the prisoner August, may best thanks for her trouble.
"Again my sincere thanks to you."
The "prisoner August" mentioned in the letter was doubtless the witness August Viewer, who testified before this Tribunal concerning the malaria experiments. Rose wrote Schilling 27 July 1943 in answer to the latter's letter of 3 July 1943, seating he was glad the shipment of eggs had arrived in good order and had proved useful. He also gave the information that another shipment of anopheles eggs would follow.
In the fall of 19 2 Rose was present at the "Cold Conference" held at Numberg and heard Helzloechner deliver his lecture on the freezing experiments which' had taken place at Dachau. Rose testified that after the conference he talked with bolzloehner, who told him that the carrying out of physiological experiments on human beings imposed upon him a tremendous mental burden, adding that he hoped ha never would receive another order to conduct such experiments.