At 5:30 a.m. on 25 December, the two were taken by an
armoured personnel carrier to the garrison command office where the trial would take place. After the medical visits, they were brought into the improvised courtroom. The trial of Nicolae and Elena Ceaușescu was very brief, lasting approximately one hour. Ceaușescu defended himself by arguing that the tribunal was against the
1965 Constitution of Romania and that only the
Great National Assembly had the power to remove him. He argued that it was a ''
coup d'état'' organized by the
Soviets. Ceaușescu completely refused to answer any questions and denied accusations of corruption or mismanagement as President, such as the
severe austerity policies leading to food and power shortages, the brutality of the
Securitate,
destruction of historical cities and villages, and his own lavish lifestyle in . No
offer of proof was made for the Ceaușescus' alleged crimes. They were tried based on references, solely by offence-name or
hearsay, to criminal acts they had committed in the opinion of prosecutors, or as alleged in press reports. Various irregularities presented themselves, or became apparent after the trial: • An accusation of genocide was never proven, although four top Ceaușescu aides later admitted complicity in genocide in 1990. Another source gives the figure of 306 people killed 17–22 December 1989. • The Ceaușescus were accused of having $1 billion in
Swiss bank accounts. No such accounts have ever been found. • The new authorities argued the execution of the Ceaușescus was necessary to stop
terrorists from attacking the new political order. No terrorists or
terrorist cells were found to have been active in Romania. A newer insight of prosecution of "crimes against humanity" claims that the new regime orchestrated "a psychosis of terrorism" through diversionary actions. ==Execution==