Demjanjuk Convicted
in Death Camp Case
(CBC News) John
Demjanjuk, alleged to have been a guard at the Nazi death camp during the Second
World War, was found guilty of accessory to murder by a Munich court on May 12 and sentenced to five years
in prison. The 91-year-old Demjanjuk, who was born in Ukraine, was charged
with 28,060 counts of accessory to murder. That figure matched the number of people
who died while he was allegedly guarding the Sobibor death camp in Nazi-occupied
Poland.
Demjanjuk was not charged with a specific crime, but prosecutors used the premise
that if he was at the Sobibor camp, then he must have participated in the killings.
He showed no emotion as he sat in his wheelchair while the verdict was read out.
He has denied the charges, but declined the opportunity to make a final statement
to the court.
Presiding Judge Ralph Alt said
Demjanjuk was a piece of the Nazis’ “machinery of destruction.”
“The court is convinced that the
defendant ... served as a guard at Sobibor from 27 March 1943 to mid September 1943,”
Alt said, closing a trial that has lasted nearly 18 months.
Demjanjuk’s son, John Demjanjuk
Jr., said the defence would appeal. He asserted that “the Germans have built a house
of cards and it will not stand for long.”
Alt later ordered that Demjanjuk
be freed pending appeal. That is not unusual in Germany
and Alt said Demjanjuk, who is stateless and was deported from the U.S. two years ago,
did not pose a flight risk. Defence attorney Guenther Maull said it wasn’t yet clear
where Demjanjuk would go once he is freed, but he was likely to be hosted by the
Ukrainian community in Munich.
The court noted that Demjanjuk, who suffers from a variety of ailments, needs daily
medical attention.
Demjanjuk denied ever having served
as a Nazi guard. He maintained he was a Red Army soldier who spent the Second World
War as a Nazi prisoner of war. After the War, Demjanjuk moved to the United States, where he worked at an auto plant near
Cleveland, Ohio. In the late 1980s, Demjanjuk was tried
in Israel,
accused of being Ivan the Terrible, a notorious and sadistic prison guard who helped
run the gas chambers at the Nazis’ Treblinka death camp. He was convicted, and given
a death sentence. However, he was later freed after a court ruled he was a victim
of mistaken identity.
PHOTO
John Demjanjuk