They came to the conclusion of the Nuremberg Trials. The Nuremberg Tribulations were a progression of thirteen tribulations that occurred in Nuremberg, Germany somewhere around 1945 and 1949. The trials involved more than a hundred defendants and several different courts. The tribulations attempted to administer reasonable and fair-minded value, yet the decision and sentences conveyed for the Germans did not satisfy numerous. The defendants included: Nazi Party officials and high-ranking military officers along with German industrialists, lawyers, and doctors. By a wide margin, the most consideration has concentrated on the first Nuremberg trial, which included twenty-four top-positioning survivors of the Nazi Party.
The most popular trial at Nuremberg was formally known as the International Military Tribunal, which was also the first, was held from November 20, 1945, to October 1, 1946. The Allies arraigned twenty-four Nazi leaders, but only twenty-three were arrested and brought to trial. Before the trial began, one of the arraigned men was considered medically unfit to stand trial. He was an industrialist named Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach. A second man, Dr. Robert Ley, killed himself by hanging himself. There were now only twenty-one defendants left. Adolf Hitler and two of Hitler's top partners, Heinrich Himmler and Joseph Goebbels, committed suicide in the spring of 1945. They could not be conveyed to trial because of their suicide. However, the defendants that did attend the trials faced terrible legal consequences. .
"The International Military Tribunal and the other twelve trials established legal principles and procedures that could serve as models for the future" (http://archive.adl.org). The format of the first tribulation was a commix of licit traditions. There were prosecutors and bulwark attorneys, but rather than a single judge and a jury, the decisions and sentences were imposed by a panel of judges.