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John Demjanjuk found guilty of helping kill Jews in Nazi death camp
MSNBC ^ | 5/12/11 | AP

Posted on 05/12/2011 7:08:48 AM PDT by Old Teufel Hunden

MUNICH — A German court sentenced John Demjanjuk to five years in prison on Thursday for his role in the killing of 27,900 Jews at a Nazi death camp.

Lawyers for Ukraine-born Demjanjuk said they would appeal the verdict.

The Munich court found the 91-year-old guilty of being an accessory to mass murder as a guard at Sobibor camp in Poland during the Second World War.

Demjanjuk, who emigrated to the United States in the early 1950s, became a naturalized citizen in 1958 and worked as an engine mechanic in Ohio, had been exonerated in a separate Holocaust trial two decades ago in Israel. In that trial he was initially sentenced to death for being the notorious "Ivan the Terrible'' camp guard at Treblinka in Poland, but the ruling was overturned by Israel's supreme court after new evidence exonerated him.

Demjanjuk, who was once top of the Simon Wiesenthal Center's list of most wanted Nazi war criminals, said he was drafted into the Soviet army in 1941 then taken prisoner of war by the Germans.

(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...


TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans
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To: gunner03

That’s true, but I tend to separate the Waffen SS from the “Death’s Head” SS units, by the end of the war, more than half in it weren’t even Germans.


41 posted on 05/12/2011 10:05:13 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: gunner03

The SS was purely voluntary early in the war. As the war ground on, however, SS units had to be replenished through the draft. Also, many of the Waffen SS units were raised in captive countries, and you could have a spirited debate over how “voluntary” some of the enlistments in those units were.


42 posted on 05/12/2011 10:06:25 AM PDT by blau993
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To: blau993; All

A topical movie about contemporary German attitudes is “The Reader” featuring Kate Winslet and Ralph Finnes.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0976051/

Re your comments, it brings to mind Sgt. Schultz of Hogan’s Hero’s fame (”I know nuzzink”)


43 posted on 05/12/2011 10:18:04 AM PDT by shalom aleichem
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To: Moltke; Bubba Ho-Tep
You didn't know? Almost all Germans received amnesty for NAZI collaboration soon after the war:
The German chancellor Konrad Adenauer was against denazification and granted amnesty to those involved in the Holocaust. Denazification was opposed by majority of German population at the time, and when West Germany was established in 1949, Adenauer made ending it one of his main priorities. Together with other German parties he passed a number of amnesty laws that overturned the process of denazification; he appointed a former Nazi official who had written commentaries on the racist Nuremberg Laws, Hans Globke, as his chief of staff in 1949; and he was pushing hard for the release of various war criminals. By January 31, 1951, the amnesty laws covered over 792,176 people. Those pardoned included people with six-month sentences, 35,000 people with sentences of up to one year and include more than 3,000 functionaries of the SA, the SS, and the Nazi Party who participated in dragging victims to jails and camps; 20,000 other Nazis sentenced for "deeds against life" (presumably murder); 30,000 sentenced for causing bodily injury, and 5,200 who committed "crimes and misdemeanors in office." By 1958 only a few of the original Nuremberg defendants were still in jail.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denazification#Konrad_Adenauer_and_the_end_of_denazification


44 posted on 05/12/2011 10:57:42 AM PDT by mas cerveza por favor
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To: Sherman Logan

I’m not an expert on the evidence, but there is quite a bit of doubt that he was even a Nazi. If he really was a POW in Germany, what is all this about anyway? Israel let him go if I’m not mistaken. Even if that wasn’t true, there are many Nazi’s still alive in Germany that probably did more heinous things than he did as a guard. If he wasn’t Ivan the Terrible, then maybe he was just following orders to stay alive. Anyway, I just think it’s over kill. Even letting him go home, he is now tainted with something that he may not have done. He has spent the last 20 years of his life worrying that he may be executed for something he probably didn’t do.


45 posted on 05/12/2011 11:01:43 AM PDT by chuckles
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To: mas cerveza por favor

You still haven’t explained, then, the recent German prosecutions that I cited.


46 posted on 05/12/2011 11:23:17 AM PDT by Bubba Ho-Tep ("More weight!"--Giles Corey)
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To: chuckles

Those most anxious to pursue him in general seem to be liberals/leftist, apparently as part of their general quest to make “Nazi” a term of evil so egregious none other comes even close.

Which is more than a little silly. The Nazi ideology was perhaps more evil than any other that has gained significant power in human history, but they have a good deal of healthy competition in this field.

What I find odd about the liberal fixation on putting this old man and other old Nazis away is that liberals in general claim prison is, or should be, for rehabilitation, not punishment. That punishment never does any good.

Yet this old dude appears to have done an excellent job of rehabilitating himself, assuming he ever really needed it. AFAIK, nobody has ever claimed he led anything but an exemplary life from his arrival in the country to the time his legal troubles started.

So why the obsession with locking away a 91-year old man? Why should debated actions over a period of a few months more than 60 years ago outweigh a decent life of decades?

I suspect it is because liberals have gotten a great deal of mileage out of equating Nazism with the ultimate in human evil, then equating Nazism with conservatism and rightism.

They’re about to run out of victims to sacrifice on this altar and must take advantage of their few remaining opportunities.


47 posted on 05/12/2011 11:25:33 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: chuckles

Those most anxious to pursue him in general seem to be liberals/leftist, apparently as part of their general quest to make “Nazi” a term of evil so egregious none other comes even close.

Which is more than a little silly. The Nazi ideology was perhaps more evil than any other that has gained significant power in human history, but they have a good deal of healthy competition in this field.

What I find odd about the liberal fixation on putting this old man and other old Nazis away is that liberals in general claim prison is, or should be, for rehabilitation, not punishment. That punishment never does any good.

Yet this old dude appears to have done an excellent job of rehabilitating himself, assuming he ever really needed it. AFAIK, nobody has ever claimed he led anything but an exemplary life from his arrival in the country to the time his legal troubles started.

So why the obsession with locking away a 91-year old man? Why should debated actions over a period of a few months more than 60 years ago outweigh a decent life of decades?

I suspect it is because liberals have gotten a great deal of mileage out of equating Nazism with the ultimate in human evil, then equating Nazism with conservatism and rightism.

They’re about to run out of victims to sacrifice on this altar and must take advantage of their few remaining opportunities.


48 posted on 05/12/2011 11:27:29 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Sherman Logan

Sorry. Sorry.


49 posted on 05/12/2011 11:28:03 AM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: Bubba Ho-Tep; Moltke
Then maybe you could explain the German prosecutions of Friedrich Engel, convicted in 2002, Heinrich Boere, convicted in 2010, and Josef Scheungraber, convicted in 2009.

Friedrich Engel and Josef Scheungraber were investigated and first convicted in Italy for killing Italians. Engel was not imprisoned because of his age. Heinrich Boere was a Dutch citizen, convicted in Holland of killing Dutchmen, who fled to Germany after the war.

All these men were convicted of direct involvment in murder. Can you name a German-born, German citizen imprisoned for war crimes like Demjanjuk for being drafted as a camp guard?

50 posted on 05/12/2011 12:51:23 PM PDT by mas cerveza por favor
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To: mas cerveza por favor
All these men were convicted of direct involvment in murder. Can you name a German-born, German citizen imprisoned for war crimes like Demjanjuk for being drafted as a camp guard?

So basically you're going from a position of "No Germans have been prosecuted" to a position of "Okay, Germans have been prosecuted, but they were murderers. And volunteers."

51 posted on 05/12/2011 2:00:37 PM PDT by Bubba Ho-Tep ("More weight!"--Giles Corey)
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To: Bubba Ho-Tep
You misrepresent me. I said "German citizens are exempted from prosecution for NAZI collaboration in Germany." I will add:

...unless they are first convicted of murder on another country.

Disagree?

52 posted on 05/12/2011 2:36:20 PM PDT by mas cerveza por favor
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To: mas cerveza por favor

on another country —> in another country


53 posted on 05/12/2011 2:52:29 PM PDT by mas cerveza por favor
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To: PzLdr
And we allowed Klaus Barbie and a bunch of SD types to work for us, get our protection, and escape with forged documentation. Demjanuk was real small fish.

Klaus Barbie was tried in France (he was known as the Butcher of Lyon) and imprisoned there until his death. You probably have seen the movie, Hotel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie. His escape to South America is detailed there, and from that film and its interviews with US post war intelligence officers, it is not a clear case of his activities being known to the US. There were many sins either overlooked, swept under the rug, along with some prosecutions; but there was also a lot of not knowing who was who and who did what in '46 to '50. Barbie died in prison, a better fate than he deserved, but I disagree that, at the time, it was clear cut to US post-war intelligence, who was who and what each of them did individually.
54 posted on 05/12/2011 3:52:51 PM PDT by bajabaja (Too ugly to be scanned at the airports.)
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To: PzLdr
That's a good point. If Demjanjuk had been a rocket scientist who worked for the Nazis, he would have had the U.S. government fabricate his papers for him in order to get him here safely after the war.

When you think about it, what it all comes down to is that Demjanjuk's only real crime was that he was an auto worker and not a rocket scientist.

55 posted on 05/13/2011 4:23:07 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("If you touch my junk, I'm gonna have you arrested.")
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