By Andriy J. Semotiuk
“I
am again and repeatedly an innocent victim of the Germans ... I find it an
unbearable arrogance of Germany, that Germany is misusing me to turn the
attention away from the war crimes committed by Germans, to make them forgotten
and against the truth to claim that the true criminals of the Nazi crimes were
me, the Ukrainians and the European neighbours of Nazi Germany.”
John Demjanjuk during his Munich Trial
About 25 years ago, I was asked to
attend a fund raising dinner for a man named John Demjanjuk. He was being deported
from the United States to face trial in Israel accused of being “Ivan the
Terrible”. I was reluctant to attend since the last thing I wanted was to
support the defence of someone who might have been a Nazi war criminal.
However, as an
immigration lawyer, I was intrigued by what appeared to me to be the use of
criminal law masquerading as immigration law in his case. From that night on, I
followed the proceedings in the many trials of John Demjanjuk. While I was not
immersed in the case, over the years I became increasingly alarmed by the legal
deficiencies that were evident in the prosecution of his case in the United
States, then in Israel, and finally in Munich. Over time, I began writing
articles pointing out these legal shortcomings. While his recent death brought
an end to his legal journey, I believe the legal legacy of his case will
trouble us for many years to come.
Demjanjuk’s legal
odyssey began while he was living in Cleveland,Ohio in the 1970s. In 1975, Michael Hanusiak,
Editor of the New York-based Ukrainian Daily News, compiled a list of
Ukrainians suspected of collaborating with Germans and presented it to what was
then the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service. John Demjanjuk was on
that list. The Ukrainian Daily News was nothing more than a pro-Soviet
mouthpiece. The newspaper served as a convenient vehicle for the Soviet KGB to
set off Jews against Ukrainians, particularly in the United States, since at
that time there was a fair degree of cooperation between the two groups who
worked with Russian dissidents like Andrei Sakharov to secure the release of
various Soviet dissidents and the emigration of Soviet Jewry to Israel in an
era of dtente.
Then
in 1977, Demjanjuk was accused of being not just a Nazi collaborator, but of being
Ivan the Terrible, a gas chamber operator in the Treblinka death camp in
Poland. From 1977 to 1993, Demjanjuk faced a long series of court hearings
through the American and then Israeli court systems, all the way to the Supreme
Court of Israel. In the course of those hearings he was found guilty and
sentenced to death. In short, for 15
years while he sat in U.S. and Israeli jails, those who pursued and prosecuted
Demjanjuk were positive that he was not in Sobibor as they claimed later in
Munich, but rather in Treblinka.
In
1993, after the defence in the Israeli proceedings amassed irrefutable evidence
of Demjanjuk’s innocence, the Israeli Supreme Court lifted the sentence,
dismissed the charges (that incidentally included the charge that he was a
guard in Sobibor), and allowed him to return to the United States. In the
meantime, a U.S. Federal Appeals Court had opened up his case after determining
that U.S. prosecutors were guilty of prosecutorial misconduct in failing
earlier to reveal to the defence a raft of files with the exculpatory evidence
that they had. Demjanjuk’s U.S. citizenship was reinstated and he was allowed
to go free once again.
As it
turned out John Demjanjuk was definitely not Ivan the Terrible of Treblinka.
But those who had pursued Demjanjuk for 15 years swearing for certain that he
was in Treblinka and not anywhere else, then declared – no, he was not in
Treblinka, but rather he was in Sobibor.
The process started all over again in 2002, and by 2009, Demjanjuk was
once again on an airplane headed out of the country, this time to Germany.
This
time, however, the charges seemed even stranger. Demjanjuk was charged not with
war crimes or crimes against humanity, nor even of murder, but of being an accessory
to murder. Not murder in Germany, but in Sobibor, that is to say in Poland. Not
as a high-level official, but as a low-ranking guard. Not as a German, but as a
Ukrainian. Not of one, or a few victims - but of 27,900 victims.
Why
did Germany decide to target Demjanjuk in this way? And why did it remain
silent for 30 years while the Demjanjuk case wound its way through the U.S. and
Israeli courts?
If
Germany was so concerned about its Nazi past, there was no shortage of Nazis to
prosecute – no shortage of party members, Nazi government officials, army
officers, camp commandants. Why, for example, didn’t Germany prosecute Reinhard
Gehlen, the former Nazi chief of the Eastern Front Intelligence and the
hundreds of other ex-Nazis he gathered in the West German Federal Intelligence
Service (BND) that he headed after World War II?
The
answer was evident. Germany did not have the stomach to fully prosecute its own
transgressors. In fact, its pursuit and conviction of its own Nazi
transgressors had not been very impressive.
Though
German courts investigated over 100,000 cases, only some 6,500 accused were
convicted and of these, most received rather light sentences. Furthermore, Germany
passed legislation that effectively provided an amnesty from prosecution for
German Nazis, including SS concentration camp commanders and their German
subordinates. But the amnesty did not extend to Untermenschen (sub-humans)
like Demjanjuk.
It
appeared that the German leadership was tired of prosecuting their own people
and was now looking for scapegoats like John Demjanjuk to slough off German
guilt for what happened in the concentration camps of World War II.
The
prosecution in Munich relied on three key pieces of evidence and a ‘novel’
legal proposition to obtain a conviction. It submitted evidence of a Trawniki
ID card, a statement of a fellow Sobibor camp guard named Ignat Danilchenko who
claimed that Demjanjuk was with him at the camp, and Nazi transfer lists that
included Demjanjuk’s name as one of the soldiers assigned to the camp. As for
the theory of guilt in the prosecution’s case, they argued that the mere
presence of a guard in this death factory was tantamount to assisting with the
murders that took place there.
Trawniki Card
Was the Trawniki card
real or was it a Soviet fabrication? Much evidence was led over the years one
way or the other. It must be remembered that the defence was not under the
burden of proving the Trawniki card to be forged. All the defence had to do was
raise a reasonable doubt about it. Three arguments stood out in my mind
regarding the card.
Perhaps
the most disturbing was the question of where the card originated and the chain
of possession that related to the card. That the signatures of the German
officials on the card were real did not lead to the conclusion that the card
itself was real. As Count Nikolai Tolstoy pointed out to Yoram Sheftel, the
Israeli attorney who defended Demjanjuk in Israel, there was an entire Soviet
KGB division known as Division 14 that dealt solely with the forgery of
documents. Sheftel indicated that the components of such cards, including
pre-signed Nazi signatures, were seized by Russian troops at the end of the
War, and were, therefore, available to the Soviets to make up false papers. The
dubious road from post-War Poland to Soviet Russia to the U.S., to Israel and
then to Munich in the hands of the persons involved did not inspire great
confidence in its authenticity. The Soviets had a motive to discredit Demjanjuk
as a Ukrainian anti-communist in Cleveland during the dtente era and the
opportunity to do so.
Some
world experts expressed reservations about the authenticity of the card. Basing
himself on all the known signatures of Demjanjuk in the years 1947 to 1986, for
example, Dr. Grant, who Sheftel claimed was the world’s foremost forensic
expert and the man who revealed the forgeries of the “Mussolini diaries” and
the “Hitler diaries”, testified in Israel that the Demjanjuk signature on the
card differed from all the others in the way the Ds and Ms were formed, and in
the fact that in all other signatures, the writing was continuous, but on the
card it was not. Further, Dr. Grant pointed out that there were two holes in
the right side of the picture on the card, whilst on the paper under the holes
in the photograph, there were no holes. Judging by the purple ink found inside
the holes which was similar to ink used by the KGB and the nature of the
spacing of the holes, Dr. Grant concluded that it was more logical to assume
that the photograph was unstapled from some other Soviet document and attached
to the card in the Soviet Union, rather than
originally attached in Trawniki in 1942. Israeli officials refused to
allow Dr. Grant to detach the photo from the card to make a conclusive finding,
but he nonetheless concluded his evidence by saying: “The Trawniki document
cannot be an authentic document belonging to the defendant Demjanjuk.” The same
conclusion was reached by many researchers around the world who have cast doubt
on the card, particularly, when it was compared to similar cards from the time
period.
Michael
Shaked, the prosecutor in the Israeli case, indicated that on January 23rd,
1987 the original Trawniki card was provided for examination to the German
police force’s main criminal-identification laboratory in Weisbaden, known for
its initials as BKA. The laboratory analysts indicated that even after a
cursory examination, it was evident that: the document was a forgery. They
pointed out that: the face in the photograph which the prosecution in Israel
had identified as Demjanjuk’s had been posted on to the uniform using
photomontage techniques; the picture was not originally attached to the card,
but had been transferred from another document; and there was no match between
the seal on the Trawniki picture and that on the document itself. Further,
German analysis of the card was stopped by the Israelis since it was not
helping their case.
These
were some to the main shortcomings related to the Trawniki card that raised
serious doubts about its bona fides. Yet the Munich court help there was
no reasonable doubt about it.
Danilchenko statement
Given that Demjanjuk was accused of
being an accessory to the murder of 27,900 victims, it would seem that such a
guard would have been well known and readily identifiable by survivors of
Sobibor whose fate would have been in his hands. Yet according to Sheftel, of
the dozen Jewish survivors of Sobibor throughout the world who were questioned
from 1976 onward, by both the American investigators and the Israeli
authorities, none identified Demjanjuk’s picture as that of a guard from
Sobibor. This was significant since it contradicted the evidence of Ignat
Danilchenko who claimed he served with Demjanjuk in Sobibor and identified
Demjanjuk’s picture when Danilchenko was interrogated in 1979 by the Soviet
KGB. Some time after his interrogation, Danilchenko said he was tortured by the
KGB which tended to discredited his assertions. He passed away without ever
being cross-examined by the defence on the identification or his claims.
Transfer Lists
There was evidence led by the
prosecution that Demjanjuk’s name appeared on Nazi transfer lists assigning him
to Sobibor.
There was some
confusion about this since Demjanjuk’s name also appeared on another transfer
list dealing with Lublin apparently punished for unlawfully leaving a camp
there. Was he at both camps?
The Court’s Conclusion that Demjanjuk
Was at Sobibor
All the foregoing evidence, according to
the court, established that Demjanjuk was indeed present in Sobibor. But this
alone was not enough to convict Demjanjuk of the crime as alleged. The
prosecution needed to prove complicity in murder.
A fundamental principle
of Western jurisprudence is individual responsibility for one’s actions. In
criminal law, this requires that the charges against the accused, and the
accused’s responsibility for the crime, must be proven beyond a reasonable
doubt. Since Demjanjuk could not be accused of any specific criminal act, he
had to be found guilty not of murder, but of being an accessory to murder. And
since he was not a German and therefore effectively amnestied by German law,
and never a Nazi, he was tried as a non-German because he allegedly worked for
the Nazis. Since there was no direct evidence of guilt, the case had to be
proven on circumstantial evidence.
To prove a
circumstantial case the evidence presented had to lead to a reasonable
conclusion that Demjanjuk was guilty - and no other reasonable conclusion. That
is the standard of proof required in such circumstantial cases under criminal
law. But others who were in Sobibor, German guards, such as Erich Lachmann,
Heinz-Hans Schutt, Heinrich Unverhau, Robert Juhres, Ernst Zirke, or Erwin
Lambert were charged but found not guilty according to the Holocaust Archive
and Research Team who list these names on their web site. If they were there,
did not try to escape due to risk of death, and were not part of the ‘killing
machine’ then that could also have been true for Demjanjuk. If anything, the
evidence in the Demjanjuk case supported a reasonable inference that he was
innocent, even assuming he was in the camp, precisely because he was NOT German
and therefore likely did not want to take part in the work of the camp.
To
many Ukrainians the Demjanjuk case demonstrated that the world did not
understand that Ukraine was a victim of both the Soviets and the Nazis during
World War II, and of the Holodomor before the war.
Their
exasperation over its many twists and turns grew over time.
For
many Jews, Demjanjuk’s case represented their last opportunity to once again
broadly publicize the evils of Nazi Germany and its role in the Holocaust. They
made the most that they could of it.
In
the end, however, this case was not really about the trial of Ivan Demjanjuk.
It was about the trial of modern-day Germany, of Israel before that, and by
extension, since the case started there, of the United States. In their desire
to condemn the transgressions of Germany’s past, the prosecutors and judges in
the Demjanjuk case, from its beginnings in the United States to Munich, failed
to follow elementary rules of fairness, due process and the rule of law. They
employed immigration instead of criminal rules to lower the standard of proof
for the prosecution, they knowingly withheld key evidence from the defence and
were found by a U.S. appeals court to have committed prosecutorial misconduct,
they deported instead of extradited Demjanjuk to Germany, they invented new
theories of guilt unknown to the law and detached from personal responsibility
and they allowed the case to be politicized to become a show trial over and
over again. The irony of the Demjanjuk case lies in the fact that despite all
these efforts to convict him, according to German law, no conviction stands
until all appeal rights have been exhausted. In other words, despite what the
international media may say, according to German law, and Israeli and American
law for that matter, Demjanjuk was never found guilty of any crime. His long
nightmare is finally over. At long last he can now rest in peace.
Andriy J. Semotiuk is
an attorney practicing in the area of international law focusing on
immigration. He is a member of the bars of New York and California in
the United States and Ontario and British Columbia in Canada. A former United
Nations correspondent who was stationed in New York, Mr. Semotiuk now practices
law and resides in Toronto.
Pace Law Firm
Sixth Floor | 295 The West Mall | Toronto, Ontario, M9C
4Z4 | Canada
Tel: 416-236-3060
Ext 459 | Fax: 416-236-1809 | Email: Andy@myworkvisa.com
PHOTO
John Demjanjuk