A. Introduction
Did the German courts fail to administer justice with regard to the heinous offenses committed during the period of National Socialism in Germany? In a nation influenced by such a cruel past and once permeated by former Nazis, the reassessment of past mistakes has always been of the utmost importance. Nevertheless, stimulated by the Amnesty Acts of 1949 and 1954 (Straffreiheitsgesetze), a stagnation in prosecutions occurred briefly after the founding of the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG).Footnote 1 As the Act was only applicable to offenses punished with a custodial sentence not exceeding twelve months,Footnote 2 notable proceedings such as the Auschwitz Prozess, instigated by the public prosecutor Fritz Bauer, still attracted the attention of the public.Footnote 3 Such cases, however, lost a great deal of their relevance due to the Introductory Act to the Regulatory Offences Act (Einführungsgesetz zum Ordnungswidrigkeitengesetz; EGOWiG) which came into force on October 1, 1968.Footnote 4 In accordance with this law, mitigation was required if special personal characteristics establishing the principal’s liability were absent in the participant—corresponding to the current statutory situation pursuant to §§ 28 I, 49 I of the German Criminal Code (Strafgesetzbuch; StGB).Footnote 5 According to the Fifth Criminal Senate of the German Federal Court of Justice (Bundesgerichtshof; BGH), the reduction of the statutory range of punishment consequently entailed a reduction in the statutory limitation to fifteen years as of May 8, 1945.Footnote 6 As such, all offenses considered to be aiding and abetting murder became barred by statute if proceedings had not been initiated before May 8, 1960,Footnote 7 and the so-called cold amnesty was brought into being.Footnote 8 After innumerable debates on the subject of the statute of limitations, especially for the aforementioned crimes in light of the National Socialist genocide, the West German Parliament decided to abolish the statute of limitations for genocide and murder (§211 StGB) in order to enable the BGH to adjudicate upon National Socialism cases, such as the case concerning Oskar Gröning.Footnote 9
On September 20, 2016, this new National Socialism case incriminating Oskar Gröning was brought before theThird Senate of the BGH. Oskar Gröning was the one and only defendant who showed remorse and regret during a National Socialism trial. He confronted himself with the Private Accessory Prosecutors and even dedicated his closing speech to them with the words, “Auschwitz was a place we shouldn’t have been a part of. I should have left it. I explicitly apologise for not having acted like this.”Footnote 10 This case can be constituted as a historical and highly significant stepFootnote 11 that permitted the BGH to validate the court ruling in the landmark case of John DemjanjukFootnote 12—a conviction which never took legal effect due to Demjanjuk’s death in March 2012.Footnote 13 The decision of the BGH with regards to Gröning, as such, enables the German justice system to uphold and to sustain the ideals and theories of the Demjanjuk case and, above all, it sets a precedent. Subsequently, on March 9, 2018, Gröning died at the age of 96 without serving his custodial sentence.
B. Description of Facts
The Third Senate of the BGH confirmed the decision of the Regional Court of Lüneburg (Landgericht Lüneburg), which had found the former SS member, Oskar Gröning, guilty of aiding and abetting murder in 300,000 cases and sentenced him to a four-year term of imprisonment. The accused, as an “ardent National Socialist,” had voluntarily joined the SS and had worked as an accountant and as one of the concentration-camp guards where he supported a regime responsible for mass murder.
In September 1942, Gröning’s superiors transferred him to Auschwitz to take part in Operation Reinhard, which was part of “the final solution to the Jewish question”—a systematic extermination of European Jews. At the turn of 1942–43, the extermination camp in Auschwitz-Birkenau had been entirely converted into a concentration camp, including four enormous gas chambers with a daily death toll of up to 5,000 people. In March 1944, the SS began with the extermination of Hungarian Jews, the so-called Hungarian Action, which was based on the model of Operation Reinhard. For this purpose, the Eichmann commando moved to Hungary. Otto Adolf Eichmann, a former German Nazi SS Lieutenant Colonel, was one of the major organizers of the Holocaust. Eichmann was instructed by SS Lieutenant General Reinhard Heydrich, the main culprit behind Operation Reinhard.
After Hungary was occupied by the Germans, the SS transported Jews to Auschwitz between May and July 1944, in order to be systematically exterminated, just as the Jews during Operation Reinhard had been. The SS prepared for the Hungarian Action by laying a new track, which terminated within the Auschwitz concentration camp, where it was further divided into three tracks. On this account, the SS unloaded the transported convicts only a few meters in front of the gas chambers. There, the SS ordered the convicts to leave their luggage on the platform. The SS told the convicts their luggage would be brought to them subsequently. The guilelessness of the victims was thereby maintained. Afterwards, the SS brought the convicts to the on-site SS doctor after undergoing gender segregation to determine who was capable of work and who was incapacitated for work and should therefore be killed immediately.
The SS exterminated those who were capable of working through labor. The SS directly guided around 80–90% of the prisoners into gas chambers where the SS members pretended to have showers. Subsequently, the Jews were requested to remove their clothes and to remember the place where they left them. Eventually, in gas chambers they died an agonizing death through the pesticide Zyklon B, which was hydrogen cyanide. Over the course of the Hungarian Action, 141 trains arrived in Auschwitz with 430,000 people. As the victims who were immediately killed were not registered, the Regional Court of Lüneburg was unable to determine the precise number of victims. Erring on the side of caution in favor of the accused, the Court determined 300,000 cases.
Oskar Gröning was active in Operation Reinhard and in the Hungarian Action, where he stood guard as trainloads of human beings entered the camp. Likewise, he counted money taken from the luggage of the murdered Jews and sent it back to SS headquarters in Berlin. In particular, Oskar Gröning had already had knowledge of every sequence of events since Operation Reinhard. Besides, he was well aware that he was supporting killing machines and approved of this, wherefore the Regional Court of Lüneburg found him guilty of aiding and abetting murder in 300,000 cases. The accused sought leave to appeal against this decision.Footnote 14
C. Judgment by the BGH
The BGH upheld the judgment of the Regional Court of Lüneburg and consequently dismissed the appeal filed by the accused. At least 300,000 people had been cruelly murdered by stealth in the Auschwitz concentration camp during the Hungarian Action. The BGH asserted the assumption of the Regional Court of Lüneburg according to which Gröning had aided and abetted all 300,000 of those murders.
Pursuant to the general principle of § 27 StGB, every action that objectively facilitates or enhances the causation of an offense’s successful commission is considered to be aiding and abetting, provided that the act committed is a result crime (Erfolgsdelikt), although it is not necessary for the action to be causal for the specific result.Footnote 15 Should the offense be committed as part of a joint criminal enterprise, for example, a gang or a criminal or terrorist association, not every act committed is generally imputable to the sole member merely due to his affiliation. Moreover, it is necessary to examine the precise contribution of each participant in every case.Footnote 16 This regulation is similarly applicable in the context of state-organized mass crimes, although certain particularities have to be adhered to. On the one hand, there were people who were only responsible in political, administrative, or military hierarchical positions without personally killing anybody during the time of the Nazi regime. On the other hand, there were people who were only following the directions they were given by superiors but were in direct contact with the specific acts of murder.
Assessed as such, the BGH confirmed that the Regional Court of Lüneburg had not made an error of assessment in concluding that Gröning aided and abetted the murders committed during the Hungarian Action, where the victims were killed in the gas chambers immediately after arrival and selection. The stipulation under § 27 StGB is certainly applicable to the death of victims where Gröning had been on duty at the ramp as they arrived at the concentration camp. He aided the SS members who were selecting and instantaneously killing the victims by dispersing Zyklon B inside the gas chambers. Meanwhile, Gröning guarded the victims’ assets in order to maintain their guilelessness, on the one hand, and on the other hand, to be part of the overall posture of threat and intimidation which would stifle any thoughts of resisting or attempting to break free.
The crimes committed against the victims at a time when the accused was not on duty are nevertheless still attributable to Gröning. It cannot be ascertained whether the accused actually physically or psychologically influenced the medicals or the SS members during the selection or the murders by simply fulfilling his general tasks. Gröning, however, aided the superior authority of the Nazi regime and the SS which commanded the Hungarian Action in spring 1944 by performing his general duties in Auschwitz. It was essential for the Nazi regime, and thus the Hungarian Action, to possess a perfectly organized and structured industrial homicide machinery with willing and obedient subordinates. The Auschwitz concentration camp, and especially the extermination camp in Auschwitz-Birkenau, were a part thereof. Their intent and their commands for the performance of the planned deportation and killing of hundreds of thousands of Hungarian Jews were hereby significantly formed and supported. Gröning was already a part of the killing machinery of the Auschwitz concentration camp at the moment of the command of the Hungarian Action by serving at the ramp upon the victims’ arrival, as it was on the roster. Moreover, the accused was involved in the utilization of the victims’ assets after they were killed, whereby he knew that the SS profited from the victims’ assets. It was not important to the Nazi regime who oversaw the duties; the only important fact was the performance as commanded in order to ensure the unobstructed progress of the Hungarian Action. Gröning was well aware of the process and intentionally accepted it. He was fully informed of the crimes committed only a short time after his arrival in Auschwitz, complied with the organization of the camp to prevent himself from being sent to the frontline, and followed the commands given. Furthermore, the accused knew that the authorities could instantly plan and perform exterminations in Auschwitz if he, in collusion with others, continued to form the basis for the industrial killing machinery.
The decision of the Third Senate of the BGH is also not at odds with judgments passed by other senates of the BGH. It is not a matter of passing judgment on Gröning because he did something during the time of the extermination of Hungarian Jews in Auschwitz. Besides, it is not every single crime committed in Auschwitz that is attributed to him. It is a matter of fact that Gröning acted in a particular manner with direct reference to the organized killing machinery of Auschwitz before and during the Hungarian Action which had to be legally appraised.
D. Determination of the Characteristics of a Perpetrator and an Accessory Within the Nazi Regime
I. Basic Principles of Perpetration and Accessorial Participation
With particular regard to the basic principles of German criminal law, Germany follows the dualistic differentiation model between principal (Täter) and accessory (Teilnehmer), governed by §§ 25–27 StGB.Footnote 17 Section 25 I StGB states that any person who commits the offense himself, or through another, shall be liable as a principal. If more than one person commits the offense jointly with another, each shall be liable as a joint principal.
An accessory is any person who intentionally induces another to intentionally commit an unlawful act—an abettor—or who assists another in the intentional commission of an unlawful act—an aider.Footnote 18 The StGB remains silent, however, with regard to the criteria for demarcation between principals and accessories, and the Federal Court of Justice and criminal law commentators have propounded numerous theories on the appropriate dividing line.Footnote 19
In the early stages of the German jurisdiction, the Supreme Court of the German Reich (Reichsgericht; RG) and the Federal Court of Justice adhered to an extremely subjective theory for the demarcation between principals and accessories. According to this so-called animus theory a principal is someone who objectively contributes to the main act—with the intent of being a principal (animus auctoris) thereto—and wants the act “as his own.”Footnote 20 Referring to the demand of the act of contribution, every kind of act, independent of its weight, could fulfill the requirement of contribution.Footnote 21 Contrary to this, an accessory is someone who contributes to the main act with the intent of being an accessory (animus socii) and who wants the act as “someone else’s action.”Footnote 22 Thus, the decisive classification criterion was solely the intent of the accused.
Over the years, the courts have dissociated themselves from the extremely subjective theory by gaining an overall picture of the events and have taken more objective criteria of the act into consideration. According to the modified animus theory—to which the Federal Court of Justice still adheres—an indication for the classification as a perpetrator can be the accused’s level of interest in the success of the offense, the type and scope of the act, the control over the act, or at least the corresponding intent to have control over the act, with the result that the commission and outcome of the crime depend on the intent of the parties involved.Footnote 23 Unlike the BGH, in recent years German law has predominantly resorted to the so-called hegemony over the act doctrine. According to this doctrine, the decisive criterion of perpetration is the hegemony and control over the execution of the criminal act.Footnote 24 Accordingly, a person will be held liable as a principal if he controlled the commission of the offense, considerably influenced the shape and manner of the commission, and can be seen as the central figure of the crime.Footnote 25
Contrary to this, an accessory is deemed not to be in the position of considerably shaping the commission of the offense, despite his obvious influence over the course of events.Footnote 26 In this context, “the actus reus of the crime in question formally functions as a vantage point for the evaluation.”Footnote 27 Both subjective and objective theories converge more and more by considering the objective contribution as well as the intention of the accused. Thus, on the basis of the aforementioned predominantly accepted mixed theory, the following forms of participation are recognized in the German system of criminal law: Physical perpetration; indirect perpetration (mittelbare Täterschaft); co-perpetration (Mittäterschaft), meaning, all considered perpetration; aiding and abetting (Beihilfe); and incitement (Anstiftung), meaning all considered as accessorial participation or Teilnahme.Footnote 28
While the sole perpetrator commits the offense on his own, the word durch—through or by using, stated in § 25 I StGB—signifies that the indirect perpetrator (mittelbarer Täter) controls the direct perpetrator (Tatmittler) of the criminal act in such a manner that he uses or manipulates him as a human tool or instrument.Footnote 29 As to participation, §§ 26 and 27 StGB distinguish between instigation and aiding and abetting. Both forms of participation presuppose that its object is an intentional and unlawful one. The instigator must have caused the perpetrator’s intent and resolve to commit the offense, whereas the aider must have promoted or facilitated its commission.Footnote 30 In the Gröning case, accessorial participation was of vital importance.
II. Description of the Problem
Although the differentiation between perpetrators and accessories should facilitate ranking every level of participation to its extent, its substantial significance, and its particular worthlessness of behavior, the usual theories of participation in crimes are not able to classify the available crimes adequately.Footnote 31 The Holocaust implies a well-organized and established apparatus of power. The direct perpetrator can be seen as nothing but a cog in the machine, which is replaceable at any time.Footnote 32 With reference to this, the chain of command compounded various levels independently of each other. Thus, each and every person contributed their action to the functioning of the Nazi homicide machinery and had a substantial effect in the perpetration of the crime. In spite of this, in the present connection, the predicament is illustrated by juxtaposing the National Socialist doctor with the concentration camp guard. While the guard intimidated and menaced the deported persons, the doctor was responsible for their medical treatment and welfare. Nevertheless, with respect to the notion of assistance, both participants—through their willed conduct—indiscriminately contributed to the functioning of the machinery. Within this framework the question arises as to what extent the legislator distinguishes between the two aforementioned persons. At this point, German criminal law appears to reach its logical limits.
III. Evolution of the Legislation
The judgment issued by the BGH concerning Gröning’s aiding and abetting during the Hungarian Action resembles former legislation on accessorial participation. After the judgment had been passed by the Supreme Court of the German Reich in the Bathtub Case in 1940, according to which the offender ought not to be convicted as a perpetrator if he commits the offense not wanting it as his own,Footnote 33 the basis for the still-valid jurisprudence of the BGH regarding the subjective characteristics of the differentiation between perpetrator and accessory was established. This yields the conclusion that the Germans were—in the context of the Nazi regime—a nation of recipients of orders, but not a nation of perpetrators.
With the Amnesty Acts of 1949 and 1954, the BGH was legitimized to solely punish those carrying out mass murder as perpetrators if they were acting excessively, whereas the majority were exculpated for only being recipients of orders and consequently accessories. After the Introductory Act to the Regulatory Offences Act came into force in 1968, punishments of the accessorial participant were obligatorily reduced if specific personal characteristics that generally lead to a conviction were missing with regard to the accused.Footnote 34 With its judgment in the Heinrich Case issued in 1969, the BGH stipulated that the regulations of the first and the third group of § 211 StGB are such specific personal characteristics whereupon the participants to a murder could only be convicted if they were subject to the first and third group.Footnote 35 The BGH opined that the reduced sentence set the beginning of the limitation fifteen years after the end of the Second World War: 1960.Footnote 36 This judgment was the decisive cornerstone for the so-called cold amnesty, as mentioned above.
After fifty years of inactivity with regard to legislating former Nazi war crimes, the BGH prolonged the mainly subjective, theory-based stipulation regarding the accessorial participation in the case of John Demjanjuk. The judgment never acquired, however, the status of res judicata due to the death of the accused. The defining of a former SS member as an accessorial participant based on the subjective theory was finally and rightfully confirmed by the BGH in the Gröning judgment. But the BGH once again did not seize the opportunity to issue general regulations, electing instead to persist with a case-by-case analysis by applying the general regulations concerning accessorial participation to state-organized mass murders in precise consideration of the special contribution of the accused to the success of the crime. This results in a fair decision of the case on its individual merits, although at the expense of general legal certainty. Further approaches to resolve the problem of attributing acts committed during the Nazi Regime will be expounded below.
IV. Further Approaches to the Solution
The approach taken by the BGH has frequently been condemned by the prevailing opinions of legal theorists. One such example of condemnation concerns the accountability of acts. According to Fritz Bauer, the offenses committed in concentration camps could be constituted as a natural operating unit and not as legally independent acts. His theory presupposes that this was the only way to reach a non-fragmentary decision which would incorporate each offense.Footnote 37 Every act itself must be treated as being engaged in the whole Nazi homicide machinery, similar in a way to an indivisible mosaic. Even the National Socialists had utilized summarized descriptions as “the final solution of the Jewish question.”Footnote 38 Furthermore, the National Socialists operated in a very complex and intertwined chain of command.Footnote 39 As such, Bauer concluded that nobody would contrive to divide this homicide machinery into several contributions and sections.Footnote 40 His theory deduces that every offense committed, from the moment a guard enters the concentration camp, partakes in the natural operating unit and has to be considered, irrespective of the individual contributions to the machinery,Footnote 41 particularly as long as the intention of the guard appertains to the essential elements.Footnote 42
This approach was rejected in a judgment of the BGH.Footnote 43 It is worth mentioning that, at this juncture, the BGH argues with the justice of an individual caseFootnote 44 and does not provide a well-founded legal explanation. Furthermore, this would exceed and not tally with the current legal situation regarding the accountability of acts under German criminal law. This will be examined in greater detail below.
It is questionable whether the BGH clearly clarified how to distinguish principals from accessories with regard to the offenses committed in concentration camps—an issue examined by Claus Roxin within his well-known theory of “indirect perpetration by means of control over an organized power structure” (mittelbare Täterschaft kraft Willensherrschaft in organisatorischen Machtapparaten).Footnote 45 It derives from the doctrine of the “perpetrator behind the perpetrator” (Täter hinter dem Täter), establishing the criminal responsibility of a perpetrator due to his control over the will of the direct perpetrator, in the case of the Holocaust by means of “control over an organization” (Organisationsherrschaft).Footnote 46
A principal, according to Roxin, would be a person who utilized the organized power structure to commit crimes and who was so involved in this that he would have been able to issue orders to subordinates. His theory assumes that it would be unimportant whether the principle undertook it of his own initiative or not; the decisive fact would be the circumstances under which he could direct a subordinated part of the structure.Footnote 47 An accessory, however, would be a person who had no power of control and whose acts did not independently move the structure forwardFootnote 48—someone who was merely a small cog in the homicide machine, fungible and exchangeable.Footnote 49 Although the accessory’s conduct might not vary from the behavior of the principal in terms of its reprehensibility, it should be the promotion of the homicide which must be evaluated.Footnote 50
The International Criminal Court (ICC) adopted Roxin’s theory in 2008 and explicitly refers to itFootnote 51 as a “legal doctrine that acknowledges the possibility that a person who acts through another may be individually criminally responsible, regardless of whether the executor (the direct perpetrator) is also responsible. This doctrine is based on the early works of Claus Roxin.”Footnote 52
E. Investigation of the Different Approaches
The explanation of the different approaches mentioned above delineates the sedulous effort of legal scholars in trying to set standards for a clear dissociation between perpetration and being an accessory. It is nigh impossible, however, to set standards that facilitate a clear demarcation to fully recognize every aspect. In the following, some of the approaches will be investigated in detail to illustrate the resultant problems that occur in trying to distinguish in accordance with these theories.
The divisions of the German criminal courts invariably employed the subjective theoryFootnote 53 as a demarcation between perpetration and participation.Footnote 54 They failed to define, however, clear standards for dissociation due to the fact that the criteria were not compelling and therefore could be weighted differently.Footnote 55 As mentioned above, in accordance with this theory, someone who never had the inner attitudeFootnote 56 to commit the offense and only carried out the act could never be seen as a perpetrator. Therefore, only a conviction due to accessorial participation could be considered.Footnote 57 Furthermore, another main crystallization point to determine whether the accused participated in or committed the crime in actuality appeared to be the presence of a command.Footnote 58
In conformity with those principles, the only perpetrators that committed the vast number of heinous and inhuman crimes in the National Socialist regime would have been, strictly speaking, Hitler, Heydrich, and Himmler. Baumann characterized this outcome as “[o]ne offender and 60 million accomplices.”Footnote 59 Unsurprisingly, this theory encountered, and still encounters, fierce criticism. It grants a broad margin of judgment to the trial judge on how to consider and weigh different aspects and circumstantial evidence.Footnote 60 Furthermore, the BGH erred when considering the aspects concerning commands from a higher instance in the National Socialist Regime. The mere existence of a command was classified as an irrefutable piece of circumstantial evidence that indicated the offender’s position as an accomplice.Footnote 61
This assumption ignores the fact that the offender still potentially had influence over the crime due to the fact that the command may have been very abstract—giving the offender the scope for decision-making regarding the details of the act—thus fulfilling the criteria for perpetration.Footnote 62 Moreover, the recipient of orders strove to show his submissiveness towards the regime. The soldier endeavored not to create the impression of him refusing to execute the order, which indicates a personal interest in the commission of the crime, and, due to this interest, it may be argued that he had the inner attitude to commit it.Footnote 63 This illustrates the significant problems that occur in applying the subjective theory.
In this context, Fritz Bauer proposed approaching the problem from a different point of view. According to him, it is not necessary to investigate every individual accusation against the accused. As mentioned above, this is due to every offense being a part of the Nazi homicide machinery.Footnote 64 Therefore, it appears inappropriate to divide it into each and every single offense committed and determine whether culpability exists or not. Instead, Bauer proposed that every offense committed by a person as soon as he enters into this machinery should not be seen as individual acts, but engagement within the system as a whole.Footnote 65
Initially, it appeared that this theory would provide a more satisfactory solution for dealing with crimes within the National Socialist Regime. In accordance with this theory, however, even people not closely connected with the cruel and inhuman regime, but who are still a part of it, would have had to face legal consequences due to the fact that they were still a part of National Socialism.Footnote 66 “Even the doctor, who had been ordered to the care of the guard and who restricted himself to this task, would be found guilty of aiding and abetting murder. The same would even apply to the doctor who treated and saved ill concentration camp prisoners in the camp.”Footnote 67 Furthermore, it appears questionable as to whether Gröning’s early role in managing the prisoners’ assets in the concentration camp would constitute a sufficient act as an accomplice in accordance with the accountability of acts under German criminal law. In such a role, he undoubtedly became a part of the homicide machinery, which, according to Bauer, would already place him in the role of an accomplice and thus not in any legal connection whatsoever to the process of murdering several thousand people. Therefore, it appears eminently questionable to assume a well-founded judgment that is also in conformity with the German criminal law system.Footnote 68
After careful consideration, both theories do not contribute a clear standard as to how to dissociate between perpetration and participation with regards to the enormous numbers of offenses committed in concentration camps. As mentioned above, Claus Roxin also examined this issue. One important point in line with his theory was the fact that it allowed authorities to investigate both the commander and the recipient of orders and to determine whether culpability existed in the form of perpetration. By contrast, the subjective theory failed to do so.Footnote 69 Despite this important accomplishment, this theory also seems to provide a well-founded legal consideration relating to the Gröning case. His role, as well as his acts in the concentration camp, did not include any power in the homicides committed, and therefore, Gröning can undoubtedly not be seen as a perpetrator. Nonetheless, the accused can be clearly perceived as an accessory according to Roxin’s theory, and therefore must face the legal consequences of aiding and abetting murder, which occurred due to his role as a general guard, a guard at the ramp, and an asset manager within the concentration camp.
F. “Murder” and “Murder Under Specific Aggravating Circumstances”
Both § 211 StGB, “murder under specific aggravating circumstances,” and § 212 StGB, “murder,” protect the legally protected right of life, which is the most highly protected legal asset under German criminal law. The criteria stipulating murder under § 211 StGB are the features used to differentiate between §§ 212 and 211 StGB. Thereby, the criteria are present in order to accentuate the particular depravity of the perpetrator’s conduct, as § 211 StGB imposes a life sentence, the maximum penalty possible under German law.Footnote 70 Concerning the criteria for murder, these have to be differentiated by dividing them into three groups, whereby all three are characterized as particularly reprehensible. Murder criteria in the first and third groups, which cover reasons and purposes of an action, pertain to the perpetrator and imply subjective characteristics of a crime. Thus, they are of major significance with regard to § 28 StGB “special personal characteristics” (besondere persönliche Merkmale). The second group, however, contains particularly reprehensible behavioral patterns which refer to the act itself, involving objective conditions.Footnote 71 With reference to the offense under § 212 StGB, a perpetrator will be convicted if they kill a person without fulfilling any particular murder criterion under § 211 StGB. Section 212 StGB is, arguably, not applicable with regard to former SS members. Despite the fact that most of the SS members asserted that they were merely obeying commands, a large number of them were likely acting out of racial hatred, which conceivably could be subsumed under the murder criteria contained in § 211 StGB.
In the German legal system, the “culpability principle” (Schuldprinzip) is one of the most fundamental legal principles and requires there to be proportionality between the sentence given to the accused and any wrongdoing perpetrated by him.Footnote 72 Therefore, murder criteria have to be examined in order to ascertain whether § 211 StGB would be applicable to former SS members in the Gröning case. Hereinafter, clarification of three murder criteria will be presented. As mentioned above, former SS members maintained the guilelessness of their Jewish captives by disseminating untrue statements. In doing so, the perpetrators fulfilled the vital component of insidiously committing murder by stealth (Heimtücke) pursuant to § 211 II StGB, fifth criterion. “A person murders by stealth if he has a hostile intent. In addition, he consciously exploits the victim’s guilelessness, as well as their defencelessness.”Footnote 73 As such, somebody who, at the time of the action, does not anticipate an assault, is guileless.Footnote 74 Consequently, somebody’s defenselessness is based upon his guilelessness, so that he is incapable of defending himself or is impaired in his self-defense.Footnote 75
With regard to the Holocaust, the SS members lied to the Jews in order to lead them to the gas chambers and kill them. As the Jews’ defenselessness was based on their guilelessness, they were incapable of defending themselves. Thus, SS members killed by stealth.
Given the fact that in gas chambers Jews had to die through the pesticide Zyklon B, which was a hydrogen cyanide, the murder criterion of “cruelty” could also be met pursuant to § 211 II, sixth criterion.
Somebody kills cruelly by inflicting [upon] the victim physical or mental pain or anguish and thereby acting callously and with relentless attitude. This happens in a way that the intensity or duration necessary for killing is far exceeded. Particular physical anguish can be torture, starvation or letting somebody die of thirst. Consequently, the decisive factor is the objective infliction of substantial pain or anguish.Footnote 76
As a matter of fact, Jewish victims were killed with a gas that took up to thirty minutes for death to occur. There had not been any possibility to escape from the chambers or to help their family members whose deaths they had to witness. This can undisputedly be subsumed as torturing in a particularly reprehensible way, which widely exceeds what is required for murder. Therefore, the murder criterion of “cruelty” under § 211 II StGB is indubitably applicable.
Nevertheless, a remarkably high number of Nazis acted out of racial hatred and aspired to annihilating the Jewish population, which is assuredly a political motive. “Political Motives describe an assault on fundamental values of a community.”Footnote 77 Thereby, somebody who has a racist motive could act out of a base motive (niedriger Beweggrund)Footnote 78 in the sense of § 211 II, fourth criterion. As during the time of National Socialism, the hatred directed towards the Jewish population was undoubtedly the main motive for slaying their community, SS members may have acted out of political motives and therefore “out of otherwise base motives” (aus sonstigen niedrigen Beweggründen) in accordance with § 211.
With reference to § 28 StGB, “special personal characteristics,” - subsection 1 stipulates a possible commutation in the absence of such “special personal characteristics” which substantiate the culpability of the perpetrator.Footnote 79 The characteristic is “personal” when pertaining to the perpetrator and “special” if it characterizes him. In accordance with the prevailing opinion, they both relate to the perpetrator.Footnote 80 Nonetheless, some of the National Socialists only acted on the commanders’ orders for fear of their own lives. Therefore, as they did not have any personal intentions or motives, they do not fulfill the requirements of any “special personal characteristics,” and thus their sentences must be mitigated.Footnote 81
Although the former SS members were guilty of several offenses in the legal sense, the moral aspects of their behavior should not be left unmentioned. In criminal law, establishing justice is secured by imposing a sentence in the event of a particular wrongdoing. There are numerous references concerning moral aspects, such as in the murder criterion “out of otherwise base motives.” Moreover, a sentence comprises two elements: The public socio-ethical verdict and the suffering of the perpetrator. Accordingly, criminal law can be defined as a socio-ethical minimum, as retributions to some extent invariably imply a value judgment.Footnote 82 In sentencing former SS members, both components are assured by conflation of the two.
G. Summary
Traditional criminal law has long ignored the question of groups as subjects of criminal actions. But in fact, our experience of the twentieth century suggests that groups have become the primary agents of criminal harm.Footnote 83 Although the demarcation approaches are likely of minor significance for further National Socialist trials—as the events firmly belong to the past and, for the most part, many participants are already deceased—the decision of the BGH in the case of Oskar Gröning and the application of §§ 25–27 StGB to organized apparatus of power still play a significant role in an era characterized by international widespread terrorism and organized crime. Membership in a criminal organization, for instance, can entail responsibility only if the accused actively took part in the acts of the organization and knew of their criminal character.Footnote 84 This illustrates that the aforementioned difficulties can be transferred to various other constellations and might even be relevant for the ICC. Thus, it is desirable for the future that the law is able to draw a straight line in reference to the basic principles of perpetration and accessorial participation, and that all crimes committed can be subsumed under their specific unlawfulness.