Howard Triest


Sergeant Howard Triest was a German-born United States Army soldier who served in World War II. He is most noted for serving as an interpreter on the Allied psychiatrist team during the Nuremberg trials.

Early life

Triest was born in Munich on March 29, 1923, to Ly/Lina and Berthold Triest, the older of two children.
His father, who—along with his brothers—had served in the German army in WWI, was the owner of a successful clothing factory that employed more than 100 people. After the Nazis came to power and antisemitism worsened in Germany, the Triests, a Jewish family, departed for Luxembourg on August 31, 1939, a day before the invasion of Poland. Attempting to travel to America, they could only afford to send Howie. His younger sister, Margot, went to Switzerland before moving to the United States. Ly and Berthold Triest, who were supposed to leave for the United States from Rotterdam the day Hitler invaded the Netherlands, were transferred to a French prison camp and later died either at or en route to Auschwitz.

Arrival in the United States and wartime service

Triest arrived in New York in 1940, where he went to work at a tool factory. He attempted to enlist in the army several times but was denied on account of not being a United States citizen. He eventually succeeded in 1943 and obtained his citizenship shortly afterwards. He was posted to Europe, landing on Omaha Beach two days after D-Day as a machine gunner. He was eventually transferred to military intelligence owing to his knowledge of German.
After his discharge in the summer of 1945, Triest joined the Department of War, where he was sent to Nuremberg as an interpreter, working for Leon Goldensohn and Douglas Kelley. He later interacted with and interpreted between psychiatrists and several top Nazi officials, including Hermann Göring, Rudolf Hess and Julius Streicher.

Personal life and death

Triest eventually married, and he and his wife Anita, had two sons.
Triest died in Oak Park, Michigan on May 11, 2016, at the age of 93.

In media

Triest is the subject of a 2006 documentary Journey to Justice and the 2012 book Inside Nuremberg Prison by Helen Fry. Triest was portrayed by actor Leo Woodall in the 2025 film Nuremberg.