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Germany: Trial against former SS member Herbertus Bikker abandoned
By Elisabeth Zimmermann
24 March 2004
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On February 2 the trial against Herbertus Bikker, a former
member of the Nazi SS (Schutzstaffel) responsible for war crimes
in Holland, was abandoned only five months after legal proceedings
were first initiated. The reason given by the court was the defendants
long-term inability to stand the trial.
After decades of delay, Herbertus Bikker was finally indicted
for murdering the 27-year-old Dutch resistance fighter Jan Houtman
in Holland on November 17, 1944. The trial had already been interrupted
several times because of the state of health of the 88-year-old
Bikker. Several medical experts had already declared him unfit
to stand trial.
The eleventh expert witness presented to the court was the
neurologist Bernd Roggenwallner, who declared that Bikker is unable
to stand trial although he is able to cope with his own household
and to drive a car. Age-related illnesses impair his abilities
to concentrate and remember things. Because of this he was declared
incapable of defending himself and properly following the course
of the legal proceedings.
The court justified the abandonment of legal proceedings on
the basis that the evidence put forward, including important eye-witness
testimony, suggested there was no likelihood of an imminent acquittal.
According to the courts logic, the hearings could have continued,
despite the defendants inability to properly participate,
if the evidence tended to indicate that an acquittal would have
been the outcome. The expenses for the trial, including the expenses
for the defendants legal counsel, will be chargeable to
the public purse.
This trial has therefore ended like many other trials against
suspected Second World War criminals in Germany. If, after decades
of long delays, criminal prosecution is initiated and charges
laid, legal proceedings are often abandoned after a short time,
with the defendants declared unfit to stand trial because of old
age.
But it is not only the accused who have been declared unfit
to stand trial, leading to the cancellation of legal proceedings
and trials or supposedly justifying lenient sentences for monstrous
crimes. Nazi criminals, who were in fact sentenced after spectacular
court cases, either havent had to serve their sentences
or have been released after a short period of time upon being
declared unfit to be kept in prison.
This theme is taken up by Ingo Müller in his book Dreadful
Juriststhe Remorseless Past of Our Judiciary (1987).
In one chapter, The punishment of Nazi-criminals,
for example, he deals with the principal defendant of the Auschwitz
trials, Robert Mulka, who was sentenced to 14 years penitentiary
by a Frankfurt court. In fact, Mulka was released just one
year after the trial because of health reasons.
In conclusion, Müller writes: A biological
amnesty was granted to even the most prominent of the accusedin
fact, they were granted this most frequently. After decades had
passed before charges were initiated, more and more Nazi criminals
reported sick. The relief on the part of the courts was detectable
as numerous proceedings were cancelled due to defendants being
unfit to stand trial. The judiciary readily accepted the assessments
and abandoned legal proceedings.
In his book Müller describes the case of two high ranking
SS officers, Bruno Steckenbach and Helmut Bischoff.
Steckenbach was a high ranking SS officer in the central Reich
security office and was one of the main planners of the mass murders
in Poland and the Soviet Union. In the Soviet Union he had been
sentenced to 25 years of forced labor, but was deported to West
Germany in 1955.
After investigations were initiated by the Hamburg judiciary,
legal proceedings were at first abandoned, but, following international
protests, revived in 1961. It took twelve years until the indictments
were presented accusing Steckenbach of being responsible
for the death of at least one million people.
Müller describes how the now 72-year-old got a medical
certificate. He, like many people of his age, suffered from circulatory
troubles. Because of this a senior consultant at a Hamburg hospital
certified that he was only partially able to stand the trial,
which meant the trial would have to be interrupted several times
a day. In the event, the seventh division for criminal matters
of the Hamburg district court decided that these kind of legal
proceedings were not compatible with the defendants human
dignity and thus once and for all abandoned legal proceedings
on April 30, 1974.
Legal proceedings against SS officer Helmut Bischoff were also
abandoned by the provincial high court and court of appeal in
Hamm on May 26, 1970. The justification given by the court was
that sentencing the defendant would be detrimental to his health.
The reason given by the court for abandoning legal proceedings
just before conclusion of the main hearing was that if the
main hearings were to be continued, there were serious grounds
for assuming that the defendant ... would be accused of being
guilty of murder in a manner which, according to experts, would
lead to an excessive rise of blood pressure.
The lack of enthusiasm by the West German judiciary for prosecuting
and convicting Nazi war criminals becomes even clearer when the
following figures published by Michael Greve in his paper: A
short balance sheet of 50 years of West German criminal prosecution
regarding Nazi crimes, are taken into account:
Since May 8, 1945, the West German judiciary has initiated
preliminary proceedings and investigations against
106,496 people, of whom 6,495 were eventually sentenced. The legal
proceedings against 102,223 suspects were either abandoned or
ended with acquittals, with sometimes extremely dubious reasons
given. Since the Federal Republic of Germany was founded, only
157 accused were sentenced to lifelong imprisonment; all others
received limited penitentiary or prison sentences.
An example given by Greve of lenient treatment is the case
of Otto Bradfisch, who commanded the so-called Task Group
B, which eliminated 15,000 Jews and Russian prisoners of
war during the period from June 1941 to April 1942. In 1961 a
Munich district court sentenced Bradfisch to only ten years imprisonment
for being an accessory to murder.
Although legal proceedings have been abandoned, the trial against
Herbertus Bikker has served to briefly shed light on the German
occupation of the Netherlands during the Second World War. The
preliminary investigations and testimony given have contributed
to a better understanding, including, for example, the description
to the court by 81-year-old Annie Bosch-Klink of what happened
on her familys farm on November 14, 1944.
Bikkers murder of the resistance fighter Jan Houtman
is only one example of the countless brutal war crimes committed
by the Nazis. But the incident also demonstrates the breadth and
depth of the broad resistance to the Nazi occupation by the Dutch
population.
See Also:
Former SS member faces trial
for war crimes in the Netherlands
[21 January 2004]
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