On 12 October 1946, Article 3 of Control Council Directive No 38 "The Arrest and Punishment of War Criminals, Nazis, and Militarists and the Internment, Control, and Surveillance of Potentially Dangerous Germans" came into effect in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany.
Article 3 categorised as criminals those who, after 8 May 1945, have "endangered or is likely to endanger the peace of the German people or of the world, through advocating National Socialism or militarism or inventing or disseminating malicious rumours".
Some 520,000 former members of the Nazi Party were dismissed from their jobs, and more than 11,000 were convicted under this legislation between 1948 and 1964. It must be stressed that the USSR would carry out the sanctions under the article in full, unlike its western allies, who applied the Denazification Directive selectively, depending on economic and political gain.
Source:
"The Unconditional Surrender of Germany. Formation of the United Nations" // History of Diplomacy / ed. by Andrei Gromyko & others. Moscow: Politizdat, 1975.