Answer:
Option C. The punishment for the Nazi leaders that were held at the trials at Nuremberg is that most of the Nazi leaders were put to death.
Step-by-step explanation:
The Nuremberg Trials were a series of 13 trials held in the city of Nuremberg, in Germany, between 1945 and 1949, with the main objective of bringing Nazi war criminals to justice. The trials were a conjunct work done by the allies, who established the laws and procedures in order to have the trials to take place. In the most famous trial of the 13 held, known as "The Trial of Major war Criminals" out of the 24 Nazis that were indicted, and considering one of them was determined to be too sick to be put into trial, and that other killed himself before the trial took place, 12 of them were sentenced to death, and the rest were given prison sentences that went from 10 years to life. The Nuremberg trials are considered a milestone in setting international courts, and were the first trials that set the president that government agents can be charged for crimes against humanity that took place during Wartime.