Manfred Roeder (judge)

Prosecution witness Manfred Roeder sits on the witness stand at the Nuremberg Trials (1947).

Manfred Roeder (August 20, 1900 – October 18, 1971) was a military judge in Nazi Germany. Serving on the highest wartime court, he led the investigation and examinations and later the prosecution of the German Resistance group, the Red Orchestra. He shared responsibility for the dozens of death sentences handed down by the Reich court martial to Red Orchestra members. After Germany's defeat in World War II, there were attempts by survivors, family and the U.S. Army to investigate the prosecutions of Red Orchestra members and others, but Roeder was never convicted of any malfeasance or crime since the Allies wanted information from him about the Russians to aid them in the nascent Cold War.[1]

  1. ^ Nelson, Anne: Red Orchestra: the Story of the Berlin Underground, chpt. 22

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