That would be more of an opinion than a concrete answer.
No, but some Nazi leaders were put on trial and convicted of war crimes.
She should be put down after a trial test in the room.
Some were put on trial, convicted and hanged. However, some, including Hitler, Himmel and Goebbels committed suicide.
Some, like Maria Mandel, the head of the Auschwitz Women's Camp. were put on trial, convicted and hanged.
If you are asking about the guards, the answer is that a few were put on trial, and some fled to Latin America, but most 'lived happily ever after'.
Yes, you should put a comma after "today" in the phrase "as of today" to indicate that the phrase is specifying the present moment.
Twenty-four Nazis were indicted, one was found to be medically unfit to stand trial, 3 were acquitted, and one committed suicide before trial began. Gustav Krupp (industrialist who used slave-labor) was found not medically fit for trial. Those acquitted were Hans Fritzsche who was the head of the news division under the Ministry of Propaganda was tried in place of Joseph Gobbels (who had committed suicide), Dr. Hjalmar Schact, banker, and Franz von Papen (later convicted in another court, found guilt, given 8 years, but served on 2 years after he was acquitted on an appeal). Robert Ley died committed suicide October 1945 while awaiting trial. A total of 19 Nazis were finally convicted at the Nuremberg Trial.
Yes, anyone who commits a crime can be tried for it; nobody is above the law.
Adolf Hitler was put on trial for treason in 1924.
He was put on trial for Libel.
the Nazis put there flag on the Hindenburg because the nazi built that blimp and traveled into America
1.5 million children were killed by Nazis.