Has anyone ever been found innocent of all charges in a war crimes trial? I’ve heard of some Yugoslavs like Jelisic and Kordic who were found innocent of some charges, but guilty or others, but none who were found innocent outright and released.
Also, what kind of evidenciary standards are applied before someone can be brought to trial? Are they more or less stringent than those of Western courts, i.e. US? I would suspect that the standards are set much higher considering the nature of the crimes and the apparently high conviction rate, but I can’t find any hard info.
There were a few aquitals in the group of 21 first tried
Franz von Papen Vice Chancellor and later Ambassador in Vienna
Hjalmar Schacht
Hans Fritzsche a radio broadcaster working with the Ministry of Propaganda
Well, you may recall the case of John Demjanjuk, a Ukrainina immigrant who was deported to Israel, on charges that he was “Ivan the Terrible,” a notorious Nazi war criminal. He was eventually acquitted by the Israeli Supreme Court- AFTER his U.S. citizenship had been stripped away.
Mind you, the Israeli Supreme Court did NOT say that Mr. Demjanjuk was an innocent angel- he SEEMS to have lied and distorted facts about his background when he first came to America, and MAY have done some awful things we don’t know about (and he refuses to talk about). However, it became clear that Mr. Demjanjuk was NOT the man he was accused of being.
Two of the accused in the war crimes trials relating to the former Yugoslavia have been acquitted - but whether the charges were dropped due to lack of evidence, or they were found ‘Not Guilty’, I don’t know.
Not that I’m aware of, but some NATO generals should be in prison now. For example, the guys who decided to start firing Tomahawk cruise missles at civilian targets in Yugoslavia. Can you say “V-2”? How about “terror bombing of civilians”? In WW2, the British general who started indiscriminate firebombing of German cities was passed over for a peerage after the war, but almost every other British general got one.