The strongest Nazi leaders had quite contrasting destinies after the World War II.


 Many would prefer suicide to capture Adolf Hitler, his propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels and SS chief Heinrich Himmler all committed suicide during the final days of the war to evade justice.

Those who were taken prisoner were tried the most at the Nuremberg Trials. These were war court trials organised by allied forces of the nations of United States, France, Britain, and the Soviet Union to put Nazi leaders on trial. It was the first instance when the trials were held regarding political and military elites as offenders of human crimes.

In the source case, 24 of the top-ranking Nazis stood in front of the judges. Twelve of them were given the death penalty by hanging including the high ranking individuals who had plotted the war and mass killings. Hermann Göring was among the closest aides of Hitler and by taking poison he outsmarted the hangman hours before he could be hanged. Some were given long prison sentences

Nevertheless, every Nazi was not convicted. Lots of them got away with help of secret passages, particularly to South America. The most notable one was that of Adolf Eichmann who was one of the masterminds behind the holocaust. He continued to live under an assumed name in Argentina until the Israeli secret police scooped him in 1960. Later Eichmann was put on trial in Israel and hanged.

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