
At a time when many former German and Japanese officials were being rushed to trial and punishment, the court felt that it needed to act quickly. So Justice William O. Douglas concurred in the decision that American courts could not hear the case but did not explain why until six months after the ruling. Justice Wiley Rutledge at first refused to vote on how to handle the case, and died a year later without having voted on whether American courts could hear the case.
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