A branch of the US Department of War investigating German cartels abroad accuses the authorities in the American Zone of Occupation of violating rulings by the Allied Control Council related to the detention of German manufacturers.
Russell Nixon, deputy director of the division of Investigation of Cartels and External Assets for the American Military Government in Berlin, told Associated Press that the government “spared” the German manufacturers.
The division was established on 12 September, 1945 to locate German cartels, syndicates, trusts, and other business associations inside and outside Germany, and investigate the scope of their activities. According to a ruling by the Allied Control Council, German industrial enterprises collaborating with Hitler must be shut down and their heads prosecuted.
Earlier in December, nine managers from chemical conglomerate IG Farben were interrogated before being released. According to Nixon, his division was pressured into it by the American authorities in the occupied territories. Lucius Clay, who heads the American Zone of Occupation in Germany, said he had only been made aware of the incident after it happened. He added that at least another 10 managers from the trust remained in custody.
IG Farben boosted Germany’s military by exploiting the forced labour of death camp prisoners. One of its branches produced Zyklon B, a pesticide used to murder prisoners in gas chambers.
The tribunal in the IG Farben trial will be established on 8 August 1947.
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Thirteen were eventually convicted and ten acquitted.
Sources:
Pravda, issue No 1 (100833), 1 January 1946
The New York Times, Vol. XCV, No 32, 117, 30 December 1945