Waffen-SS Officer Joachim Peiper at Malmedy Massacre Trial in 1946

Mugshot of Leibstandarte SS frontline veteran Joachim Peiper
Jochen Peiper receiving his death sentence by hanging



















After Nazi Germany's capitulation SS-Standartenführer 
Joachim Peiper was imprisoned and humiliated for his alleged part in the Malmedy massacre, and most likely wrongly accused of having ordered the executions of U.S. POWs. The widely-criticised Malmedy massacre trial was held in May–July 1946 in Dachau. It attracted great attention because of the later disputes about the conduct of the trial. The highest-ranking defendant was the former SS-Oberstgruppenführer Josef Sepp Dietrich. Many of the accused, as well as eye witnesses, testified that officers and non-commissioned officers of SS-Kampfgruppe Peiper were physically abused. The prisoners claimed to have been threatened that if they did not confess they would be hanged. They should also have been told that if they did not sign the required confessions, their families would be handed over to the Soviets. These allegations does not appear to have impressed the court at that time. Nevertheless, Joachim Peiper offered himself and accepted any and all responsibility for whatever any of his men had been accused of - whether true or untrue. Although he was not at the scene when the incident occured and that the court could not prove that he had ordered the killings, Joachim Peiper was sentenced to death together with 42 other defendants. The discovery of grave misconduct at the Malmedy trial was later reported to Washington DC. Time magazine reported on misconduct in the trial in January 1949 and major newspapers, including the New York Times, Washington Post and Chicago Tribune, regularly included coverage. The senate of the USA proceeded to investigate the case. This investigation took place after the verdicts had been handed down. The prosecutions star witness, former U.S. Army sergeant Kenneth Ahrens was later uncovered having been giving false testimony on which basis dozens of men had been executed. Lt. Col. Burton L Ellis, the prosecuting attorney said that he personally did not believe in the accusations. Major Hal McCown (former POW of Peiper) of the U.S. 30th Infantry Division came to the trial to testify about Joachim Peiper's honorable treatment of the American prisoners in Stoumont. Left image: a mugshot of Joachim Peiper taken at Schwäbisch Hall prison before the verdict was delivered. Credit: Marina Amaral. U.S. Army Signal Corps Collection. FU. Right clip: the 31-year-old Joachim Peiper when sentenced to death by hanging on June 21 1946. U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, Archive Number: 111 ADC 5965.