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Books > History > World history > From 1900 > Second World War
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Hitler's Executioner - Judge, Jury and Mass Murderer for the Nazis (Hardcover)
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Hitler's Executioner - Judge, Jury and Mass Murderer for the Nazis (Hardcover)
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Though little known, the name of the judge Roland Freisler is
inextricably linked to the judiciary in Nazi Germany. As well as
serving as the State Secretary of the Reich Ministry of Justice, he
was the notorious president of the People s Court , a man directly
responsible for more than 2,200 death sentences; with almost no
exceptions, cases in the People s Court had predetermined guilty
verdicts. It was Freisler, for example, who tried three activists
of the White Rose resistance movement in February 1943\. Along with
Christoph Probst, Sophie and Hans Scholl were arrested for their
part in an anonymous leaflet and graffiti campaign which called for
active opposition against the Nazi regime. Found guilty of treason,
Freisler sentenced the trio to death by beheading; a sentence
carried out the same day by guillotine. In August 1944, Freisler
played a central role in the show trials that followed the failed
attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler on 20 July that year a plot
known more commonly as Operation Valkyrie. Many of the ringleaders
were tried by Freisler in the People s Court . The proceedings were
filmed, the intention being to use the images as propaganda in
newsreels. Freisler could be seen alternating between clinical
interrogations of the defendants through to his yelling of
personalized and theatrically enraged abuse at them from the bench.
Nearly all of those found guilty were sentenced to death by
hanging, the sentences being carried out within two hours of the
verdicts being passed. Roland Freisler s mastery of legal texts and
dramatic court-room verbal dexterity made him the most feared judge
in the Third Reich. In this in-depth examination, Helmut Ortner not
only investigates the development and judgments of the Nazi
tribunal, but the career of Freisler, a man who was killed in
February 1945 during an Allied air raid.
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