United States v. Wilhelm von Leeb
Nuremberg Military Tribunal
12 LRTWC 1 (1948)
- Written by Deanna Curl, JD
Facts
Wilhelm von Leeb and 13 other high-ranking officers (the officers) (defendants) commanded forces in the German military throughout Europe during the Second World War. The defendants were alleged to have been involved in the formulation, distribution, and execution of a number of orders that resulted in murder, looting of private property, forced labor, unlawful imprisonment, and other crimes that occurred in territories under their jurisdiction throughout the war. After the war, the officers were charged with crimes against peace, war crimes, crimes against humanity, as well as conspiracy to commit these crimes for the acts that occurred in areas under their command. The officers were tried before an American military tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany.
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Per curiam)
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