Prusin, Alexander V. (1. mars 2010). «Poland's Nuremberg: The Seven Court Cases of the Supreme National Tribunal, 1946–1948». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 1 (på engelsk). 24: 1–25. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/dcq001. Besøkt 10. april 2020. «Hans Aumeier, who was Höss's deputy and the commanding officer of the prison camp (Lagerführer), had served at Dachau, Buchenwald, Flossenbürg, and Lichtenburg. …. Indeed, the Auschwitz survivors who testified—both Poles and Jews—remembered their tormentors well. One after another they described to the court their experiences of continuous degradation, torture, and murder. Aumeier beat prisoners without provocation. …. Höss's successor, Arthur Liebehenschel, and Aumeier also justified their actions by superior orders. … Therefore, it found Göth, Höss, Liebehenschel, Aumeier, Grabner, Mandel, Mühsfeldt, and eighteen other particularly brutal Auschwitz functionaries and SS-guards guilty of membership in criminal associations and groups and of shared intent to commit mass murder. All were sentenced to death by hanging.»
Prusin, Alexander V. (1. mars 2010). «Poland's Nuremberg: The Seven Court Cases of the Supreme National Tribunal, 1946–1948». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 1 (på engelsk). 24: 1–25. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/dcq001. Besøkt 10. april 2020. «Hans Aumeier, who was Höss's deputy and the commanding officer of the prison camp (Lagerführer), had served at Dachau, Buchenwald, Flossenbürg, and Lichtenburg. …. Indeed, the Auschwitz survivors who testified—both Poles and Jews—remembered their tormentors well. One after another they described to the court their experiences of continuous degradation, torture, and murder. Aumeier beat prisoners without provocation. …. Höss's successor, Arthur Liebehenschel, and Aumeier also justified their actions by superior orders. … Therefore, it found Göth, Höss, Liebehenschel, Aumeier, Grabner, Mandel, Mühsfeldt, and eighteen other particularly brutal Auschwitz functionaries and SS-guards guilty of membership in criminal associations and groups and of shared intent to commit mass murder. All were sentenced to death by hanging.»
Prusin, Alexander V. (1. mars 2010). «Poland's Nuremberg: The Seven Court Cases of the Supreme National Tribunal, 1946–1948». Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 1 (på engelsk). 24: 1–25. ISSN8756-6583. doi:10.1093/hgs/dcq001. Besøkt 10. april 2020. «Hans Aumeier, who was Höss's deputy and the commanding officer of the prison camp (Lagerführer), had served at Dachau, Buchenwald, Flossenbürg, and Lichtenburg. …. Indeed, the Auschwitz survivors who testified—both Poles and Jews—remembered their tormentors well. One after another they described to the court their experiences of continuous degradation, torture, and murder. Aumeier beat prisoners without provocation. …. Höss's successor, Arthur Liebehenschel, and Aumeier also justified their actions by superior orders. … Therefore, it found Göth, Höss, Liebehenschel, Aumeier, Grabner, Mandel, Mühsfeldt, and eighteen other particularly brutal Auschwitz functionaries and SS-guards guilty of membership in criminal associations and groups and of shared intent to commit mass murder. All were sentenced to death by hanging.»