Berlin Document Center

Its task was to centralize the collection of documents from the time of Nazism, which were needed for the preparation of the Nuremberg Trials against war criminals.

[1] While the paper records remained in Germany, the entire collection was microfilmed and made available at the National Archives in Washington, DC, where researchers have much better access unhindered by restrictive German privacy laws now[when?]

[citation needed] The files were rescued from destruction in May 1945 when they were discovered by U.S.

Counter Intelligence Corps (CIC) Agents at a paper mill in Freimann, Germany, where they had been shipped by the Nazi leadership to be pulped.

[2] Under certain circumstances and with legitimation, it is possible to gain access to the files.

Two American researchers at the Berlin Document Center in 1947