Extraordinary State Commission - Reports Submitted at Nuremberg

Reports Submitted At Nuremberg

The Soviet prosecution introduced 31 reports from the Extraordinary State Commission as Exhibits for the prosecution at the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg.

  • USSR-1 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in the Stavropol region
  • USSR-2 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on the destruction of industry, etc. in the Stalino region
  • USSR-2(a) Report of a special commission on crimes in Stalino
  • USSR-4 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on causing death by spreading epidemic of typhus
  • USSR-5 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on the "Gross-lazarett" in the town of Slavuta
  • USSR-6 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the Lvov region
  • USSR-8 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Auschwitz Nazi death camps
  • USSR-7 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in Lithuania
  • USSR-9 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in Kiev
  • USSR-29 Joint Polish and Soviet report of the Extraordinary State Commission
  • USSR-35 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on losses sustained by State enterprises and establishments
  • USSR-37 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the city of Kupiansk
  • USSR-38 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on German crimes in the city of Minsk
  • USSR-39 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in Estonia
  • USSR-40 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission concerning destruction and atrocities in the Pushkin Reservation of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Science
  • USSR-41 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Latvia
  • USSR-42 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the town of Krasnodar and vicinity
  • USSR-43 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Kharkov and vicinity
  • USSR-45 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the town of Rovno and vicinity
  • USSR-46 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Ore1 and vicinity
  • USSR-47 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in the city of Odessa and vicinity
  • USSR-49 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission dated 13 September 1944: destruction of works of art and art treasures
  • USSR-50 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on the destruction of monuments in Novgorod
  • USSR-54 Report by a special Soviet commission, 24 January 1944, concerning the shooting of Polish officer prisoners of war in the forest of Katyn
  • USSR-55 Report of special Soviet commission on crimes in the city of Krasnodar and vicinity
  • USSR-56 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities committed in Smolensk and vicinity
  • USSR-63 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Sevastopol and other cities
  • USSR-246 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission of the Soviet Union concerning destruction of ecclesiastical buildings
  • USSR-248 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission concerning the destruction of Kiev's Psychopathic Institute
  • USSR-249 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on German atrocities in Kiev
  • USSR-279 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the city of Viazma and others in the Smolensk region
  • USSR-415 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes committed against Soviet prisoners of war in the camp of Lamsdorf

Only one of these reports, USSR-54 (in German) concerning the Katyn massacre, appears in the English version of the NMT "Blue Series" collection of exhibits. An editor's note states that "the absence of a Soviet editorial staff it impossible to publish any documents in Russian". As a result, of the 51 Soviet prosecution exhibits included in the document collection all are written in either English or German.

Read more about this topic:  Extraordinary State Commission

Famous quotes containing the words reports and/or submitted:

    Journalism without a moral position is impossible. Every journalist is a moralist. It’s absolutely unavoidable. A journalist is someone who looks at the world and the way it works, someone who takes a close look at things every day and reports what she sees, someone who represents the world, the event, for others. She cannot do her work without judging what she sees.
    Marguerite Duras (b. 1914)

    [O]ur rules can have authority over such natural rights only as we have submitted to them. The rights of conscience we never submitted, we could not submit. We are answerable for them to our God.
    Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826)