The eight men involved in the case were
Ernest Peter Burger,
George John Dasch,
Herbert Hans Haupt, Heinrich Heinck,
Edward Kerling, Herman Neubauer,
Richard Quirin and Werner Thiel. Burger and Haupt were U.S. citizens. (317 U.S. 1) All were born in Germany and all had lived in the United States. All returned to Germany between 1933 and 1941. After the declaration of war between the United States and Nazi Germany in December 1941 following the Japanese sneak
attack on Pearl Harbor, they received training at a sabotage school near
Berlin, where they were instructed in the use of explosives and in methods of secret writing. Burger, Dasch, Heinck and Quirin traveled from
occupied France by
U-202 to
Amagansett Beach,
Long Island,
New York, landing in the hours of darkness, on June 13, 1942. The remaining four boarded the German submarine
U-584 which carried them from France to
Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. On June 16, 1942, they came ashore during the hours of darkness. All eight wore full or partial German military uniforms so that if they were captured upon landing, they would be entitled to prisoner-of-war status rather than being treated as spies. The Long Island group was noticed by Coast Guard beach patrolman John C. Cullen, whom the saboteurs attempted to bribe with $260. Cullen returned to his station and sounded the alarm. The two groups promptly disposed of uniforms and proceeded in civilian dress to
New York City and
Jacksonville, Florida, respectively, and from there to other points in the United States. All had received instructions in Germany from an officer of the
German High Command to destroy war industries and other key targets in the United States, for which they or their relatives in Germany were to receive salary payments from the German government. Upon landing, Dasch and Burger turned themselves in to the
Federal Bureau of Investigation with some difficulty, since the FBI did not believe them immediately. They convinced the FBI that they were telling the truth and the remaining six were taken into custody in New York and
Chicago, Illinois by FBI agents. The FBI had no leads until Dasch gave his exaggerated and romanticized version in
Washington, D.C. Military tribunal On July 2, 1942,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Proclamation 2561 establishing a military tribunal to prosecute the Germans. Placed before a seven-member military commission, the Germans were charged with: • violating the law of war; • violating Article 81 of the
Articles of War, defining the offense of corresponding with or giving intelligence to the enemy; • violating Article 82 of the Articles of War, defining the offense of spying; • conspiracy to commit the offenses alleged in the first three charges. From July 8 to August 1, 1942, the trial took place in Assembly Hall #1 on the fifth floor of the
Department of Justice building in Washington, D.C. On August 3, 1942, two days after the trial ended, all eight were found guilty and sentenced to death. Roosevelt later commuted the death sentence of Dasch to 30 years in prison and the sentence of Burger to life in prison, as they had both confessed and assisted in capturing the others. Indeed, it was Dasch who approached the FBI, offering to turn the men in, which he then did. Burger was part of the plot to turn on the others and cooperated with the FBI extensively. The remaining six were executed in the
electric chair on the third floor of the
District of Columbia jail on August 8 and buried in a
potter's field called
Blue Plains in the
Anacostia area of Washington. In 1948, Dasch and Burger were released by President
Harry S. Truman and deported to the
American Zone of occupied Germany. Dasch spent the remaining years of his life trying to return to the United States. One time, a visa application was sent to
J. Edgar Hoover by the
State Department on Dasch's behalf. Hoover stated that the idea of giving Dasch a visa was "outrageous" and promptly denied it. Dasch died – still in Germany – in 1992.
Constitutionality of military tribunals Throughout the trial, Roosevelt's decision of creating a military tribunal to prosecute the Germans was challenged by
Lieutenant Colonel Kenneth Royall, who was appointed to defend the Germans. Royall said that Roosevelt had no right to create a military tribunal to try his clients, citing
Ex parte Milligan (1866), a case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the
federal government could not establish military tribunals to try civilians in areas where civilian courts were functioning, even during
wartime. Since civilian courts were functioning in Washington, D.C., he argued that the case involving the Germans should be heard there.
Attorney General Francis Biddle, who was appointed as a
prosecutor of the case, responded that the clients who, acting on behalf of the German government, secretly entered into U.S. territory without proper uniforms in time of war for the purpose of committing hostile acts, were not entitled to have access to civilian courts. Biddle stated that, "This is not a trial of offenses of law of the civil courts, but is a trial of the offenses of the law of war, which is not recognizable by the civil courts. It is the trial, as alleged in the charges, of certain enemies who crossed our borders ... and who crossed in disguise and landed here ... They are exactly and precisely in the same position as armed forces invading this country." Royall asserted that there was no evidence to prove that the Germans would have followed through with their plans, claiming they had only vague contacts through which to communicate with Germany, and no plans to return home until after the war. Biddle rebutted this argument, citing the case of British
Major John André, who was executed as a spy by the
Continental Army for passing through American lines to meet with American officer
Benedict Arnold during the
American Revolutionary War. Royall, along with his clients, then petitioned for a writ of
habeas corpus demanding that the Germans were entitled to
trial by jury guaranteed by the
U.S. Fifth and
Sixth Amendments. Though the U.S. Supreme Court had been adjourned for the summer, it convened to consider the matter in a special session on July 29, 1942. Justice
Frank Murphy, an Army officer at the time, recused himself. Royall argued that the German landings at New York and Florida could not be characterized as "zones of
military operation" and contended that there was no combat there or plausible threat of invasion by approaching enemy forces. He argued that civilian courts were functioning, and under the circumstances, they were the appropriate venue for the case to be heard. Biddle responded that the U.S. and Germany were at war and cited the
Alien Enemies Act of 1798 which stated: On July 31, the Supreme Court unanimously denied Royall's appeal, writing, "The military commission was lawfully constituted ... petitioners are held in lawful custody for trial before the military commission and have not shown cause for being discharged by writ of habeas corpus." ==Supreme Court decision==