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Hitler's Lawyer Wilhelm Frick
註釋Wilhelm Frick was an attorney and a key member of Hitler's Third Reich. He was an early supporter of Adolph Hitler. Frick was a civil service expert and became German Minister of the Interior under Hitler in January 1933 when the Nazi government was formed. He remained a loyal supporter of Hitler and was tried, convicted, and executed at the Nuremberg Trials in 1946.
The Nazi government made an attempt to legitimize its operations by passing laws under the German constitution. Frick was involved in implementing many of the laws. He helped to form laws in 1933 which allowed Hitler to establish a dictatorship. Frick was involved in setting up the infamous Nuremberg Race Laws in 1935. The book studies Frick's input into many of the laws used by the Hitler dictatorship to implement its Third Reich programs.
Wilhelm Frick was indicted by the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg Germany in 1945. The research examines the indictment of Frick and the activities that were pursued to try to defend him. The Nuremberg Trial material is used to show why Frick was convicted and executed. Wilhelm Frick was not one of the more famous Nazi officials. He was critical, however, to forming the Nazi government through the use of his skills related to the German civil service system and the lawmaking process.