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Nuremberg Trials-Katherine Fite, the only Senior Female Lawyer at Nuremberg, Papers & Correspondence

Nuremberg Trials: Katherine Fite, the only Senior Female Lawyer at Nuremburg, Papers & Correspondences

This collection contains a total of 379 pages.

Katherine Boardman Fite (later Katherine Fite Lincoln) was an assistant to Justice Robert H. Jackson, the Chief United States Prosecutor of the Office of the United States Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality, at the Nuremberg trials.

Fite's primary duty was to assist in the preparation of evidence and arguments for use in the trials of Nazi leaders. At Nuremberg, she helped interrogate defendants von Ribbentrop, Keitel, and Frick. John Q. Barrett, professor of Law at St. John's University, has written that, "the legal undertaking that was Nuremberg, however, only one female attorney participated, significantly and from the beginning, in the London negotiations, the pretrial work, and the commencement of the International Military Tribunal proceedings at Nuremberg."

 
Katherine Fite Papers & Correspondences

Approximately 300 pages of material. This collection is chiefly composed of characterful and vividly descriptive letters that Fite wrote to her parents while in London and while engaged in her work at Nuremberg.

They give her impressions of London and parts of Germany in the months immediately following the end of the war in Europe; they describe too both the intimate and social sides of her life as a member of the war crimes tribunal staff, and the work that she performed while with this staff.  It also includes a few of Fite's travel papers and souvenirs.

Document Sources: Harry S. Truman Library: Katherine Fite Lincoln Papers

 
The Nuremberg Judgement A Summary by Katherine Fite

A 36-page 1947 summary written by Katherine Fite.

Abstract: The general definition of the crimes charged against the defendants at Nürnberg is contained in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, which describes the Tribunal's composition and jurisdiction. Particulars of the charges are set forth in the Indictment. The article below summarizes the Tribunal's judgment against the background of the Charter and Indictment.

 
Politics and Prosecutions, from Katherine Fite to Fatou Bensouda

A 2012 paper written by Professor Diane Marie Amann, Chair in International Law at the University of Georgia School of Law.

Abstract: Based on the Katherine B. Fite Lecture delivered at the 5th Annual International Humanitarian Law Dialogs in Chautauqua, New York, this essay examines the role that politics has played in the evolution of international criminal justice. It first establishes the frame of the lecture series and its relation to IntLawGrrls blog, a cosponsor of the IHL Dialogs. It then discusses the career of the series' namesake, Katherine B. Fite, a State Department lawyer who helped draft the Charter of the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg and who was, in her own words, a "political observer" of the proceedings. The essay then turns to the the International Criminal Court, in which the first Prosecutor insisted that his was a "judicial" mandate wholly separate from politics. With an eye to transition this year, when a new Prosecutor will assume office, it considers how the ICC might work more effectively within the context of policy choices its officers make.

 
About Katherine Fite

Katherine Boardman Fite Lincoln was born ca. 1905 in Boston, Massachusetts. She received her A.B. degree from Vassar College in 1926 and her LL.B. in 1930 from Yale University Law School. From 1934 to 1936 she worked as an attorney for the General Claims Commission of the United States and Mexico. In 1937 she began work as the Assistant to the Legal Adviser at the U.S. Department of State. In July 1945 she was assigned to the Office of the U.S. Chief of Counsel for the Prosecution of Axis Criminality, Nuremberg, Germany. She married Francis F. Lincoln in 1957, and in 1962 retired from service with the Department of State. Lincoln died on June 20, 1989, in or near Boston, Massachusetts.


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