In March 1937, early in the
Great Purge, Krestinsky was suddenly transferred to the post of USSR Deputy People's Commissar for Justice. After a 'confession' had been forced out of him, he was put on trial (as part of the
Trial of the Twenty One) on 12 March 1938. While almost all of the other defendants admitted their guilt during the
Moscow Trials, on the first day of the trial, 2 March, Krestinsky told the presiding judge,
Vasili Ulrikh: I do not plead guilty. I am not a Trotskyite. I was never a member of the 'bloc of Rights and Trotskyites', of whose existence I was not aware. Nor have I committed any of the crimes with which I personally am charged; in particular I -plead not guilty of having had connections with the German intelligence service. The following day, he made a total reversal of his position: Yesterday, under the influence of a momentary keen feeling of false shame, evoked by the atmosphere of the dock and the painful impression created by the public reading of the indictment, which was aggravated by my poor health, I could not bring myself to tell the truth, I could not bring myself to say that I was guilty. And instead of saying, "Yes, I am guilty," I almost mechanically answered, "No, I am not guilty." Such a reversion was a rare episode in the
show trials, of the late 1930s. It caused speculation that the person brought back on the second day was not Krestinsky, but someone recruited to play him, or that he had been hypnotised. He went on to 'confess' that he was a German agent, and that he had met Trotsky in the Tyrol resort of
Merano in October 1933 to receive instructions on sabotage. However, Trotsky was under constant surveillance by Soviet agents at the time and
KGB records from the 1950s do not mention any trip to Merano. He was partially exonerated during
Nikita Khrushchev's
destalinisation program, when, on 27 October 1963,
Izvestia carried an article by the former soviet ambassador to Great Britain,
Ivan Maisky, praising Krestinsky as a "diplomat of the Leninist school.". He was cleared of all charges during
Mikhail Gorbachev's
perestroika reforms. == Personality ==