In 1946 files of the missing indictment were discovered by the US Army in the Bavarian Justice Ministry and were used in evidence in the trials of senior Nazis at the Nürnberg tribunal of 1947. Flamm's thoroughly gathered and documented evidence within Hartinger's indictment ensured it achieved convictions of senior Nazis such as
Oswald Pohl. Wintersberger's complicit behaviour is documented in his own evidence to the
Pohl Trial. Although the three accused parties named in Hartinger's original indictment were already dead, the indictment also mentioned "persons unknown" who might have acted on their behalf and one of their most brutal underlings,
Hans Steinbrenner was still alive. On the basis of Hartinger's original indictment, Steinbrenner was charged with the murder of Louis Schloss and (with new evidence from several former Dachau prisoners) the murders of Wilhelm Aron and Karl Lehrburger. At Steinbrenner's trial in 1952, the jury reached the following verdicts: Murder of Schloss: not guilty, Grievous Assault of Schloss: guilty (sentence 2 years), Murder of Lehrburger guilty but under duress from his commanding officer (sentence 10 years), Murder of Aron: Guilty (sentence life imprisonment). From his cell in
Landsberg prison in 1962 Steinbrenner typed an 8-page confessional letter, which he sent via the prison authorities to Hartinger. He told Hartinger that he himself would have been killed in 1933 had he not been known by so many powerful dignitaries. In May 1963 Steinbrenner was transferred from the prison at
Landsberg am Lech to a nursing home in
Berchtesgaden, where he later hanged himself. The practicality of running the judicial system won out over the principle of Denazification, especially when it was entrusted to new German state. So in the post-war German legal system and in the Bavarian State Cabinet, Hartinger still had to deal with many personalities who had been enthusiastic Nazis and others who had conformed with the regime. The infamous
Braunbuch published by the
GDR claimed to list all functionaries of the
Federal Republic of Germany who were former Nazis and war criminals. The 1968 edition lists Josef Hartinger as a former
Kriegsgerichtsrat (
Judge-advocate with equivalent rank as Major) of the "Höheres Kommando LX" (a communications division of the
Wehrmacht). Whether such a position would have afforded him scope for war crimes is arguable but it contradicts the record in the Bavarian State Archive that shows him working as director of the district court ("Landgerichtsdirektor") in the town of Amberg from 1936 until the end of the war. As with all German lawyers, Hartinger came before a
Denazification hearing (
Spruchkammerverfahren) in 1948 and was restored to his position in
Amberg. In 1954 Hartinger was appointed as "Bundesanwalt beim Bundesgerichtshof" at the newly founded
Federal Court of Justice in
Karlsruhe, presided over by
Hermann Weinkauff, who from 1932 to 1937 was Director of the Landgericht in Munich I (while Hartinger was in Munich II), a member of the
Association of National Socialist German Lawyers (BNSDJ) and eventually transferred from prosecution to jurisprudence presiding over cases involving "racial defilement" at the III. Criminal Senate. In 1953 Weinkauff openly challenged a decision by the
Federal Constitutional Court rejecting an appeal by 34 former Gestapo officials for the right to reinstatement as civil servants. From 9 December 1958 until his retirement on 5 December 1966, Hartinger served as Chief Secretary at the Bavarian Ministry of Justice in the Cabinets of
Dr. Hanns Seidel,
Dr. Hans Ehard and
Dr. Alfons Goppel. He served under Justice Ministers of the FDP as well as CSU and although he is widely referred to as a "politician", unlike most Cabinet members he is listed without party allegiance. In 1984, at the request of the Bavarian Minister of Justice, August Lang, Hartinger wrote his recollections of the Dachau investigations and failed indictment of 1933/34 in two extensive letters to the minister dated January 16 and February 11. He died 6 months later shortly before his 91st birthday. == Portrayal in the media ==