From the DW:
“US and
Germany: How to deal with the last Holocaust perpetrators”
The case of
former Nazi guard Friedrich Karl B. underlines the disconnect between how the
US and Germany deal with Holocaust perpetrators. The 95-year-old will now live
out the rest of his days in Germany. Ninety-five-year-old Friedrich Karl B. has
escaped trial in Germany. On February 20, the former concentration camp guard
was extradited from Tennessee to Frankfurt after a US court found him to be a
Holocaust perpetrator. B. had admitted
to having served as a camp guard, but he told a US immigration court in 2020
that he hadn't seen any prisoners abused, hadn't known of any deaths among the
inmates and had not been posted to guard the evacuation marches of the camp. Since
there are no surviving witnesses to give testimony, when B. announced that he
was unwilling to be questioned again, on March 31, prosecutors in Celle,
central Germany, declared that their investigation was over: There was no new
evidence, and that was that. B., who had
been living in the US since 1959, is now likely to spend the rest of his life
in Germany. Christoph Heubner, executive vice-president of the International
Auschwitz Committee in Berlin, finds it "strange" that the US and
German judicial systems have such different interpretations of the case:
"If the Americans are sending people back the German prosecutors have a
duty to clear that up," he told DW.
Two views of
guilt But the German authorities'
reluctance to confront the case is not unusual: In the last four decades, the
US has deported 70 aging Nazi perpetrators to Germany, and the vast majority
have never faced a German court. Many, such as the Polish-born Jakiw Palij,
a 95-year-old SS collaborator who was deported from his home in New York to
Germany in 2018 after a long diplomatic battle over where he should be sent,
simply end up living out their final days in a care home at the expense of the
national insurance system. The
relevant US law, a 1978 immigration law amendment, rules that anyone found to
have participated in Nazi "persecution" can be removed from the US —
though of course only if another country is prepared to take them in. But
Germany has no law specifically covering participating in the Holocaust.
Decades after the war, ex-Nazis can only be tried for murder or accessory to
murder. The statute of limitations on all other relevant crimes — rape,
kidnapping, torture, manslaughter — have long since expired. And finding proof
for specific crimes is hard.
Thomas Walther
knows this only too well. The 77-year-old lawyer and former judge has played
one of the leading roles in investigating and prosecuting former Nazis in
Germany over the last 20 years, often struggling to explain the vagaries of
German law to the Holocaust survivors he has represented. "In
a US immigration court, it's enough to conclude that the suspect is
lying," he told DW. "That he was keeping his Nazi past secret, and
that he served in some concentration camp, whichever one it was and whatever
actually happened there," he said. In
Germany, prosecutors need evidence of a specific crime to have any hope of
making a charge stick — and for that the crime scene has to be established.
"You have to prove he was [a guard] in camp X and not in camp Y,"
said Walther. "It's only when I have a crime scene that I can determine
what the principal crime was — the murder of specific people, for example. And
then you have to answer the question: In what way did the accused commit
accessory to murder?"
Friedrich Karl B.'s story This makes things very difficult for prosecutors, especially when — as in the case of Friedrich Karl B. — it comes to clarifying events that took place in the chaos of northern Germany at the end of the war. The Neuengamme memorial in Hamburg played a significant role here, specifically its chief archivist, Reimer Möller, who sent a list that included B.'s name to Germany's Central Office of the State Justice Administrations for the Investigation of National Socialist crimes in Ludwigsburg. The list was compiled from a set of Nazi personnel cards salvaged from a ship sunk by the Royal Air Force in May 1945. With this evidence, Möller was able to piece together what is known of B.'s story. In January 1945, B. was a 19-year-old Navy private who the SS drafted to guard two Meppen concentration camps, part of the Neuengamme "system," which comprised more than 80 camps that stretched from Hamburg to the North Sea coast. B. guarded prisoners on the island of Langeoog, one of the many places where Jews, Danes, Poles, Russians, Italians and other incarcerated people were forced to build gigantic defenses along Germany's northern coast. According to the Neuengamme memorial, hundreds of them died because of inadequate food, clothing, and shelter. A presiding US judge also found that prisoners at the Meppen camps were held in "atrocious" conditions and were worked "to the point of exhaustion and death," but no one can be certain where B. served. The camps were evacuated in March 1945 — and at least 70 prisoners are known to have died on the subsequent "death marches" from the Meppen camps — but Friedrich Karl B. denies that he guarded the marches, and Möller cannot say for sure that he was one of the Navy soldiers who guarded prisoners during those marches.
German
reluctance That is a familiar
problem for Eli Rosenbaum, perhaps the investigator most responsible for
tracking down Holocaust perpetrators in the US. For three decades, Rosenbaum
has been "hunting Nazis" — as he does not like calling it — first as
director of the DOJ's Special Office of Investigations, and now for the last 11
years as director of the DOJ's Human Rights Enforcement Strategy and Policy
department. For Rosenbaum, a lack
of political will in Germany has led to much frustration. "The larger
problem vis-a-vis the German government over the decades has been that they
have typically refused to accept people we wanted to deport for involvement in
Nazi crimes," he told DW. "They
normally tell us: Sorry, can't prosecute that case — our policy is to only
admit people who we can prosecute," he said. "As a result, a number
of Nazi perpetrators have died in the United States even though we won our
cases in court here, and proved that they took part in Nazi crimes, but Germany
just wouldn't take them." Rosenbaum
has personally interviewed many of the more than 100 Nazi perpetrators that his
organization has been responsible for tracking down in that time. "In
some respects, the later the cases are brought, the more powerful the
message," he said. "If you dare to act on orders to commit such
crimes ... there is a real chance that what remains of the civilized world will
pursue you for as long as it takes," he said. For
Rosenbaum, there is no reason why nonagenarians should not be brought to
justice, however minor their role in the Holocaust might have been. "I'm
not in the habit of ranking them," he said. "To the individual victim,
this was the most important perpetrator. All of these cases send a crucial
message, and in some respects, the later the cases are brought, the more
powerful the message." That message is simple, he said, and it's
directed at would-be participants in future atrocities: Those acts won't be
forgotten.
^ Sadly, Germany
(first West Germany and East Germany and then reunited Germany) has long worked
to help and support the Nazis (there is no such thing as a Former Nazi) and
those that worked for them from 1933-1945. You would think that after 1945 the
Germans would have tried to bring them to justice for their horrible crimes, but
they didn’t. There were a few show-trials and sentences throughout the decades where
most of the harsh punishments were later relaxed, but for the most part the
German Government and the German people as a whole has worked hard to protect
the Nazi Murderers even at the cost of their innocent victims. You can clearly
see it in this article where the German DW doesn’t even use the suspect’s last
name to “protect” him as German Law requires. The main reason for the German
Government and the German people protecting these Nazis is because nearly every
single German family was involved, in some way, with the Holocaust and all the
other war crimes. Every single level of post-war West German society until the
1980s was plagued with Nazis and their supporters. That means Government
Officials, Judges, Lawyers, Doctors, Teachers, Trash Collectors, Bankers, Store
Clerks, the Police, the Military, etc. were either active Nazis from 1933-1945 and
simply went into a new “career” path after 1945 or they were active Nazi
Supporters. Their beliefs and views didn’t not change after 1945, they merely
kept them quiet so that they could live in the open and receive German
Government Pension for their “service to the Fatherland” (ie. murdering
innocent men, women and children.) It may be 76 years since the end of World War
2, but the Nazi legacy of 1933-1945 as well as the post-War Nazi cover-up from
1945-Present continues to this day in Germany. That is why the Germans are
still hesitant to bring Nazis and their supporters to justice even in 2021 for
fear that the world will see how hard the German Government and the German
people have worked to protect the Nazis for 7 decades. Germany tries to portray
itself as a changed nation that has pushed its Nazi past aside yet can you really
claim to be sorry for the Nazi crimes when you also continue to protect and
help (pensions, etc.) the Nazis? No. No you can’t. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/us-and-germany-how-to-deal-with-the-last-holocaust-perpetrators/a-57091799
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