Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Volume IV
Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, Volume IV
Office of the United States Chief of Counsel for Prosecution of Axis Criminality
GPO, 1946
[Interesting provenance, previously owned by Samuel L. Morison.] Volume 4. Bound in red cloth. Hardcover. Shelf wear. Hardcover. Good binding and cover. Blind stamp on title page. Stamps of Navy Office of Naval History, and from the collection of Samuel L. Morison on front end page. iii, 1107 p., 23 cm.
"Former Navy intelligence analyst Samuel L. Morison, who received a presidential pardon in 2001 after being convicted of passing secret ship photos to a British publication, pleaded guilty on Thursday to stealing records related to his naval historian grandfather. Morison was accused in June 2014 of offering to sell to a bookstore owner U.S. records relating to the work of his late grandfather, Pulitzer Prize-winning naval historian Rear Admiral Samuel Eliot Morison, during World War Two. President Franklin Roosevelt had assigned the elder Morison to write a history of U.S. wartime naval operations. The bookstore owner was alleged to have taken the records on consignment to sell them on eBay. Agents with the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration found that the documents offered for sale online belonged to the U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command, the prosecutor's statement said. A search of Morison's residence turned up about 34 boxes of his grandfather's papers suspected of being taken from the Navy Archives. Morison had served as a part-time researcher at the archives, the statement said. U.S. District Judge William Quarles Jr. sentenced Morison to probation with two conditions: that Morison not get access to any library or archives without his probation officer's permission, and that he help investigators identify government property in his possession. In imposing the sentence, Quarles cited Morison's failing health, military service and cooperation with investigators. Morison was convicted in 1985 of illegally passing secret photographs of Soviet ships to the publication Jane's Defense Weekly and was sentenced to two years in prison. He was the first person convicted under the U.S. Espionage Act for divulging secrets to the press. In 2001, President Bill Clinton pardoned Morison despite the opposition of the CIA. The elder Morison wrote a 15-volume history of U.S. naval operations during World War Two. He won Pulitzer Prizes for his biographies of Christopher Columbus and of U.S. Revolutionary War sailor John Paul Jones.
The Red Series is a Collection of Documentary Evidence and Guide Materials Prepared by the American and British Prosecuting Staffs for Presentation before the International Military Tribunal at Nurnberg, Germany.' The Red Series makes available an indexed sampling of the evidence used to support the charges made against the major Nazi war criminals in their trial at Nuremberg, Germany, 1945-1946.