Goering: Guilty of I, II, III, IV; Death sentence (but committed suicide in his cell prior to execution)
Frank: Guilty of III, IV; Death sentence (and actually expressed remorse for what he had done)
Jodl: Guilty of I, II, III, IV; Death sentence (but later exonerated by a Germany de-Nazification court in 1953 for just "following orders")
Doenitz: Guilty of II, III; 10 years and served all 10 years
Ribbontrop: Guilty of I, II, III, IV; Death sentence (he initially flattered that his role was important enough to be tried in court with the other Nazi leaders, but it cost him his life with the guilty verdicts)
Hitler: Committed suicide in Berlin before the end of the war
Himmler: Committed suicide after being tracked down by the Allies
Speer: Guilty of III, IV; 20 years and served 20 years, though he might have been executed had he not given the Allies a wealth of information following his capture. He was still relatively popular with the German people and many people called for a reduction in his sentence.
Homma: Arrested by the Americans and sent back to Manila to face trial as a war criminal. Homma was sentenced by an American military commission to death and died by firing squad for his responsibility for the Bataan Death March.
Hirohito: Granted immunity from prosecution with his cooperation with the Allied Governments; he was seen as a symbol of Japanese unity and conservatism
Ishii: Ishii faked his own death in late 1945 and went into hiding. When he was found, he struck a deal with American forces to give details of his program in exchange for immunity from war crime prosecution. He died of cancer in 1959.
Tojo: Shot himself in an unsuccessful suicide attempt, tried at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East and was found guilty of various counts of waging wars of aggression in violation of international law and of ordering inhumane treatment of prisoners of war and others.