Summary: "On July 26, 1943, a District of Columbia grand jury indicted eight American citizens—Frederick W.
Kaltenbach, Max Otto Koischwitz, Jane Anderson ("The Georgia Peach"), Edward Delaney, Constance Drexel, Robert Henry Best, Douglas Chandler, and Ezra Pound—in absentia for treason due to their Nazi propaganda radio broadcasts during World War II.
The broadcasters aimed to undermine U.S. morale and support Hitler's regime.
Most did not face trial: Koischwitz died in 1944, Delaney and Drexel’s charges were dropped in 1947 for insufficient evidence, Kaltenbach died in Soviet custody, and Pound was deemed mentally unfit.
Best and Chandler were convicted in 1948, receiving life sentences, while Anderson’s case was unresolved due to her disappearance."