In re Neumann
Leipzig Supreme Court
16 Am. J. Int’l L. 704 (1922)
- Written by Alex Ruskell, JD
Facts
Neumann (defendant) commanded a German submarine. At the beginning of the war, the German Admiralty followed the Geneva Convention and did not sink enemy hospital ships. However, the German Admiralty began to believe that enemy combatants were using hospital ships for war purposes in violation of the Geneva Convention. Consequently, the German Admiralty ordered its commanders to sink hospital ships. Neumann’s submarine crossed paths with an English hospital ship, and Neumann ordered that the ship be sunk with a torpedo. After the war, Neumann was charged with crimes related to the sinking of the hospital ship.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning ()
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