Trial of Pierre Laval

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A01=J. Kenneth Brody
Adolf Hitler
Author_J. Kenneth Brody
Bor Mines
Category=NH
collaborationist government studies
Comte De Paris
counsel
De Chambrun
De Gaulle
De LaPommeraye
defense
Defense Counsel
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fred Kupferman
General De Gaulle
historical memory law
Hitler
Hotel Du Parc
Le President
legal history WWII
Monsieur Le President
Montparnasse Cemetery
National Assembly
Ooh La La
Pierre Laval
Policy Laval
political trials France
postwar French treason prosecution
Preliminary Examination
President
Presiding Judge
Service De Travail Obligatoire
Trial Dossier
Vichy regime analysis
wartime justice ethics
Young Men
Yvon Delbos

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138517059
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In a stunning work combining historical memory, legal ambiguity, and profound issues of justice, J. Kenneth Brody provides a picture of France in World War II that continues to haunt the present. Architect in 1940 of Marshal Petain's Vichy French regime and its prime minister from April 1942 to August 1944, at war's end Pierre Laval was promptly arrested on charges of treason. This book tells the story of his trial. Did he betray France, or did he serve France under terrible circumstances? What was the truth of "collaboration"? This book considers the pretrial proceedings, or lack thereof, the evidence, and the arguments of the prosecution, as well as Laval's vigorous defense in the early days of the trial.

Because of irregularities in the preliminary proceedings, Laval's defense counsel declined from the outset to participate in the trial. For those reasons and because of the prejudicial conduct of the prosecution, on the third day of the trial, Pierre Laval also declined to participate further. What his defense might have been in a normal pre-trial proceeding and in a fair trial are matters of conjecture. What remains clear is that political trials are a unique form of law and moral judgment.

Trials and history share a common goal-the truth. Trial, judgment, and appeal are intended to produce finality. History, on the other hand, is never final. After its performance in the trial of Pierre Laval, the government of France continued its policy of concealment, even though the truth could no longer determine the outcome of the trial. Slowly, by persistence, courage, and loyalty, history's claims to truth were established. This book presents the defense that might have been presented and then relates the final judgment, its grisly execution only eleven days after the trial opened, and its aftermath.

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