Benjamin B. Ferencz, Romanian born, Jewish American
lawyer. Chief US prosecutor at the
Einsatzgruppen Trial (Sept 1947 - April 1948), 9th of
the 12 subsequent Nuremberg Trials
Ferencz admitted in a 2005 interview with the Washington
Post:
At Auschwitz "they 'processed' 60,000 people a day."
(that's 21,900,000 per year)
He witnessed a SS man, who had not be charged, nor
convicted of anything, handed over to people
in a Displaced Person Camp (which were virtually all
Jews), who tortured him, and burnt him alive.
July 24, 2005
Ferencz, who today is 85 and lives in New York,
cautions against making sweeping armchair moral
judgments. "Someone who was not there could never
really grasp how unreal the situation was," he says.
"I once saw DPs beat an SS man and then strap him to
the steel gurney of a crematorium. They slid him in
the oven, turned on the heat and took him back out.
Beat him again, and put him back in until he was
burnt alive. I did nothing to stop it. I suppose I
could have brandished my weapon or shot in the air,
but I was not inclined to do so. Does that make me
an accomplice to murder?"
Ferencz also admits threatening to kill civilians who'd
committed no crime, and that statements
taken under duress are invalid. Obviously he wasn't
thinking that most of the statements
taken from the Nazis who admitted to gassing Jews, were
taken under duress ie torture.
Ferencz -- who went on to a distinguished legal
career, became a founder of the International
Criminal Court and is today probably the leading
authority on military jurisprudence of the era --
cannot specifically address Weiss's actions. But he
says it's important to recall that military legal
norms at the time permitted a host of flexibilities
that wouldn't fly today. "You know how I got witness
statements?" he says. "I'd go into a village where,
say, an American pilot had parachuted and been
beaten to death and line everyone one up against the
wall. Then I'd say, 'Anyone who lies will be shot on
the spot.' It never occurred to me that statements
taken under duress would be invalid."