By Mark Weber
Published:
1995-01-01
"Death
Sentence for Murderer of a Jew. The Reich guarantees protection of law for all
residents. Terrible crime in a train punished." Under these headlines,
this report appeared in December 1937 in numerous German newspapers.
A
jury court in Stettin, the paper informed readers, had sentenced Josef
Reinhardt to death for killing a Jewish businessman named Abraham and his
non-Jewish wife. One accomplice was sentenced to life imprisonment, and a
second to six years imprisonment. The newspaper report continued: "That
the victim was a Jew made no difference in passing sentence, the presiding
Judge stressed. The Third Reich is a state of law, in which Jews enjoy the
protection of law every bit as much as other residents. Murder is still murder,
and will be punished most severely in each case."
Murder
remained a crime during the war years. Paragraph 211 of the revised German
penal code (published in October 1943), defined murder without any
qualification about the victim's race, religion or nationality, and designated
capital punishment for the crime. German military regulations were even more
strict. The updated, 1943 code spelled out severe punishment for the soldier
who carried out orders in violation of the law. "The subordinate... is
punishable as a participant... when he knows that the superior's order would have
the aim of leading to a military or other crime or violation." (New
York Review, Oct. 7, 1993, pp. 51-52.).
During the Nuremberg trial of 1945-1946, evidence was presented to show that German soldiers who had murdered civilians, including Jews, were severely punished. (IMT "blue series," Vol. 42, pp. 23s.-:.242.)
During the Nuremberg trial of 1945-1946, evidence was presented to show that German soldiers who had murdered civilians, including Jews, were severely punished. (IMT "blue series," Vol. 42, pp. 23s.-:.242.)
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