After the Nuremberg Trials, the man who conducted the hangings was an American soldier named John C. Woods
After the Nuremberg Trials, the man who conducted the hangings was an American soldier named John C. Woods. Others believe that he could have been mentally disturbed due to how he executed the people. Woods was not much of a hangman. He had lied to receive the job on the basis of experience. There were also issues displayed in his military time.
A few years earlier, he was thrown out of the Navy when the doctors diagnosed that he had a psychopathic condition. It is an indication that individuals had their suspicions about him a long time before Nuremberg.
The hangings were badly done. The ropes that Woods used were short-lived. Due to this, the prisoners were not dying very fast with broken necks. They instead choked to death. It seemed mean and unfeeling to the onlookers. Others even believed that Woods did this intentionally.
They claimed he did not feel anything and he even took pride in what he had done. In later days, he said to reporters that he was not nervous and was happy to do the job.
What he actually felt is unknown to everyone. But his background and the manner in which he was able to implement the executions leads one to believe he somehow derived some black pleasure in the agonizing deaths. That is why he is regarded by many as one of the most problematic individuals associated with that historical event.
What did the German soldiers think of the American soldiers during World War 2?
Many people were frustrated with how the Americans fought, especially the officers who didn’t have the same resources as their enemies. The common soldier was annoyed that the American
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