Arthur Alden Kimball (1908 – 1996) was an American civil servant and lawyer who was part of the prosecution staff for the Nuremberg Trials, and also helped establish the Economic Cooperation Administration for administering the Marshall Plan.
[1] Arthur Kimball entered government service in 1928 when he began work as a clerk for the United States Census Bureau.
He later served as chief of administration for the U.S. prosecution team at the Nazi war crimes trials in Nuremberg, Germany.
Kimball then joined the White House Office as staff director of the president’s Advisory Committee on Government Organization (PACGO).
The Senate did not confirm the appointment and Kimball left government service after John F. Kennedy became president.