I said that it was wrong for anyone to be beheaded. I didn't mean that his information was wrong.
I understood what you were saying JimH.
> If one is a prisoner of war and the war is over (fuzzy boundary admittedly in this case) they simply have to be released.
> Like GI's in Germany in WW2 or Germans in Britain in WW2, etc.
Not all of them were released willy nilly, they did a review and then they decided if they did anything that would be considered a crime, and they did have trials, and not only the main players at the top.
Note: Some German Prisoners were not released by the USSR until 1955 after they were used as slave labor.
there were 12 actual trials held in Germany, and to get to a trial you had been reviewed by a tribunal to go to a trial.
note the end of the european war was May 7th-8th of 1945, so trials were on going over 3 years from the end of the actual war, and not everyone stopped shooting, German snipers loyal to the Nazi hold outs were shooting at the US troops for 6 years after the war was over.
1.The Doctors' Trial (9 December 1946 - 20 August 1947)
2.The Milch Trial (2 January - 14 April 1947)
3.The Judges' Trial (5 March - 4 December 1947)
4.The Pohl Trial (8 April - 3 November 1947)
5.The Flick Trial (19 April - 22 December 1947)
6.The IG Farben Trial (27 August 1947 - 30 July 1948)
7.The Hostages Trial (8 July 1947 – 19 February 1948)
8.The RuSHA Trial (20 October 1947 - 10 March 1948)
9.The Einsatzgruppen Trial (29 September 1947 - 10 April 1948)
10.The Krupp Trial (8 December 1947 - 31 July 1948)
11.The Ministries Trial (6 January 1948 - 13 April 1949)
12.The High Command Trial (30 December 1947 - 28 October 1948)