Nuremberg pierced the bubble of state protection, establishing the landmark principle that you are an individual first, with a duty to humanity that is higher than your duty to your flag.
The prosecution laid out four distinct legal charges to hold the Nazi leadership accountable. These included crimes against peace, which involved the planning and waging of a war of aggression; war crimes, which covered traditional violations like the mistreatment of prisoners; crimes against humanity, a new concept addressing the murder, enslavement, and deportation of civilians; and finally, a conspiracy to commit all of the aforementioned acts.
The "Nuremberg Defense" refers to the legal argument made by many defendants that they were "just following orders" from a superior authority, specifically Adolf Hitler. The Tribunal rejected this as a valid defense, establishing the landmark principle that individuals have a moral choice. If a person has the opportunity to make a moral decision, they are held personally responsible for their actions regardless of the orders they received from the state.
Nuremberg was selected for both practical and symbolic reasons. Practically, the city’s Palace of Justice was one of the few large buildings left standing in Germany that featured a functional jail attached to the courtroom. Symbolically, the city had been the site of massive Nazi rallies and the place where the racist Nuremberg Laws were first proclaimed in 1935, making it a powerful location to perform a legal "exorcism" of the regime.
Chief Prosecutor Robert Jackson made a deliberate choice to rely on a "paper mountain" of evidence rather than just witness testimony to ensure the trial's record would withstand future denial. The prosecution gathered over 3,000 tons of documents, including the Wannsee Protocol and Heinrich Himmler’s speeches, effectively letting the Nazi bureaucracy testify against itself. They also pioneered the use of film as evidence, showing both Nazi home movies and Allied footage of liberated concentration camps.
Nuremberg established the "Nuremberg Principle," which asserts that heads of state and individuals are not immune from prosecution for crimes against humanity. This created a direct legal lineage to modern institutions like the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the U.N. war crimes tribunals. It also led to the creation of the Nuremberg Code, which remains the foundation for global medical ethics regarding voluntary human consent in experimentation.
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