Judgment at Nuremberg
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

:29:02
no appeal to sentiment,
no falling at the mercy of the court.

:29:07
The game...
:29:09
will be played according to their own rules.
:29:14
We'll see whether they have the courage
to sit in judgment on a man like you.

:29:20
The way I see it...
:29:23
the most important elements in the case...
:29:28
are the sterilization decrees,
and the Feldenstein-Hoffman affair.

:29:37
Dr. Janning, I must tell you something.
:29:45
I admired you...
:29:48
since I was a boy in the university.
:29:52
It was because I thought
I might be able to achieve...

:29:55
some of the things you have done...
:30:02
that saw me through the war.
:30:05
You have been somebody to look up to,
for all of us.

:30:12
Is that all, Herr Rolfe?
:30:18
Yes.
:30:19
Thank you.
:30:30
Dr. Wieck, do you know the defendant,
Ernst Janning?

:30:37
Yes, I know him.
:30:39
Will you tell us in what capacity?
:30:42
We served in the Ministry of Justice together
from 1929 till 1935.

:30:47
Did you know him before that?
:30:49
Yes.
:30:51
He was a law student of mine.
:30:53
- Did you know him well?
- Yes.

:30:55
- Was he a protégé of yours?
- Yes.

:30:56
Why?
:30:59
He was always a man of great intelligence.

prev.
next.