Tuesday, January 21, 2020
The Rosenberg Trial :: essays research papers
 The Rosenberg trial, which ended in a  double execution in 1953, was one of the century's most  controversial trials. It was sometimes referred to as, "the  best publicized spy hunt of all times" as it came to the public  eye in the time of atom-spy hysteria. Husband and wife,  Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were charged with conspiracy to  commit espionage. Most of the controversy surrounding this  case came from mass speculation that there were influences  being reinforced by behind-the-scenes pressure, mainly from  the government, which was detected through much  inconsistencies in testimonies and other misconduct in the  court. Many shared the belief that Ethel Rosenberg  expressed best as she wrote in one of her last letters before  being executed, "-knowing my husband and I must be  vindicated by history...We are the first victims of American  Fascism." Some people believed that the Rosenbergs had a  vulnerable background which made these innocent people  fall victim to the government. In September 1940 Julius  Rosenberg was hired by US army Signal Corps as a junior  engineer, but fired March 1945 because he was found to be  a member of the communist party. He was employed in  1945 with Emerson Radio. Finally, in 1946 Bernard  Greenglass, his brother-in-law, asked him to a join war  surplus business called Pitt Machine Products Company.  Ethel Rosenberg supported herself as a teenager through  pageant prize money she won as a singer and dancer. Later  on she was employed as a clerk for National Shipping but  lost her job for union activities. They lived a happily married  life with two sons until June 15, 1950 when brother-in-law,  David Greenglass named Julius and Ethel as people who  recruited him to spy for the Soviet Union. The case judged  by Irving R. Kaufman began on March 6,1957. The  Rosenbergs, as well as Morton Sobell, were accused of  delivering information, documents, sketches and other  material vital to the national defense of our country, to a  foreign power, namely, to Soviet Russia. Greenglass testified  that it was he who turned over most of these materials to the  Rosenbergs because of pressure. On March 29, after a  much publicized court case, the couple were found guilty and  sentenced to be executed in the week of May 21, and their  accused co-conspirator, Sobell, got 30 years in jail because  he was not explicitly connected to the atom bomb. Many  people were against this decision and the president tried to  justify such rash actions: "The execution of two human beings  is a grave matter. But even graver is the thought of the  millions of dead whose death may be directly attributable to  what these spies have done." After many failed appeals,  Julius and Ethel were electrocuted minutes apart on June 19,    					    
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