Sneha Girap (Editor)

Rudolf Lehmann (military judge)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Service/branch
  
German Army

Role
  
Military judge

Name
  
Rudolf Lehmann


Rudolf Lehmann (military judge)

Born
  
11 December 1890 Posen (
1890-12-11
)

Allegiance
  
German Empire (to 1918)  Nazi Germany

Rank
  
Generaloberststabsrichter

Commands held
  
Judge Advocate General of the German Armed Forces

Battles/wars
  
World War I World War II

Died
  
July 26, 1955, Bonn, Germany

Years of service
  
1914–18, 1938–45

Battles and wars
  
World War I, World War II

Rudolf Lehmann (11 December 1890 – 26 July 1955) was a German jurist and military judge who was the Judge Advocate General of the Wehrmacht in World War II. Lehmann was a member of the Nazi Party and was found guilty of war crimes at the High Command Trial at Nuremberg in 1948.

Contents

Career

His father was a professor of law. He grew up in Breslau and Hanau, studied law in Munich, Freiburg, Leipzig and Marburg and qualified as a lawyer before service as a reserve officer in the Imperial Army in World War I, during which he was awarded the Iron Cross. After the war he returned to Marburg University where he was awarded a doctorate in jurisprudence. He then entered government service as a prosecutor and worked at the Reich Justice Ministry.

He entered the Army Legal Service in October 1937 and from July 1938 to May 1945 was president of the Reich Military Court. In this role he assessed the charges against Generaloberst Werner von Fritsch between February and March 1938 and his judgement was for an acquittal. On 1 May 1944 he was given the unique rank of Generaloberststabsrichter (Colonel General Judicial Officer) which was equivalent to Generaloberst but outside the normal chain of command. He was taken into captivity in May 1945 and held in a US Army Prisoner of War Camp.

Nuremberg trials

He was found guilty of war crimes at the Nuremberg High Command Trial in October 1947 for involvement in drafting the Barbarossa Decree and the Commissar Order that stipulated that any captured Soviet political commissar was to be executed, contrary to international law. He was sentenced to seven years imprisonment but was released from Landsberg prison 16 August 1950. He then lived in Bad Godesberg, where he was Managing Director of the mining trade association. He died in Bonn aged 64.

References

Rudolf Lehmann (military judge) Wikipedia