GERMANY: Forced by a change in legal practice after John Demjanjuk's conviction, Germany reopens investigation into hundreds of Nazi files
Record ID:
723404
GERMANY: Forced by a change in legal practice after John Demjanjuk's conviction, Germany reopens investigation into hundreds of Nazi files
- Title: GERMANY: Forced by a change in legal practice after John Demjanjuk's conviction, Germany reopens investigation into hundreds of Nazi files
- Date: 8th October 2011
- Summary: LUDWIGSBURG, GERMANY (OCTOBER 7, 2011) (REUTERS) EXTERIOR OF GERMANY'S FEDERAL ARCHIVES, LUDWIGSBURG BRANCH SIGN OUTSIDE VARIOUS OF PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AND HEAD OF ARCHIVES KURT SCHRIMM AND AIDE WALKING IN HALLWAY AIDE OPENING ARMOURED DOOR, SIGN ON DOOR READING "THIS IS WHERE KNOWLEDGE FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS IS STORED!" VARIOUS OF AIDE AND SCHRIMM LOOKING AT FILES FILE READING "ACCUSED: UNKNOWN - CRIME SCENE: PENAL CAMP STAROSIELCE NEAR.." SCHRIMM AND AIDE WALKING PAST AND UNLOCKING ANOTHER DOOR AIDE LOOKING AT FILES VARIOUS OF SCHRIMM AND AIDE DISCUSSING FILE VARIOUS OF SCHRIMM AND AIDE WALKING PAST LINES OF RACKS WITH FILES, LOOKING AT THEM (SOUNDBITE) (German) KURT SCHRIMM, PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AND HEAD OF ARCHIVES, SAYING: "Demjanjuk was sentenced by Munich's regional court for assisted murder although it was impossible to provide evidence to have committed a specific crime and although he was never German and although the crimes he was accused of did not happen on German soil. This is a change in the legal practice which forces us to investigate similar cases again, based on article 3 of the constitution which says that everyone needs be treated equally." PILES OF FILES / RACKS WITH FILES (SOUNDBITE) (German) KURT SCHRIMM, PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AND HEAD OF ARCHIVES, SAYING: "A later conviction or the possible conviction has almost no influence on our work. We are an authority to investigate and clear up Nazi crimes, not to persecute them. That will be the task of the state attorney, to decide whether the man or the men are still able to stand trial or not. Our task is first of all to shed light on the cases in order to tell the public what happened." PAN ACROSS RACKS WITH FILES (SOUNDBITE) (German) KURT SCHRIMM, PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AND HEAD OF ARCHIVES, SAYING: "Our main focus is on the so called extermination camps. We will initially ignore the concentration camps, which were at the same time labour camps because evidence would be very, very difficult. The task forces however play a very important role. However, it must be said that we are a little sceptical since these task forces consisted of people who already at the time were of a certain age. So the hope that a lot of them are still alive is relatively small." SIGN ON DOOR READING "THIS IS WHERE KNOWLEDGE FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS IS STORED!" / SCHRIMM AND AIDE LEAVING ROOM, AIDE LOCKING DOOR
- Embargoed: 23rd October 2011 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Germany, Germany
- Country: Germany
- Topics: History
- Reuters ID: LVABB77A6BFII946YO3AGV61HJYJ
- Story Text: The conviction earlier this year of retired U.S. autoworker John Demjanjuk at a Munich court forced German authorities to reopen investigations into hundreds of Nazi files.
The court convicted Demjanjuk in May for his role in the killing of 28,000 Jews in the Sobibor Nazi death camp, then set the 91-year-old free because of his age.
On Friday (October 07), the head of the Ludwigsburg branch of Germany's federal archives said that although the Ukraine-born Demjanjuk "was never German and although the crimes he was accused of did not happen on German soil," there had been a change in legal practice.
Prosecuting attorney and head of the Ludwigsburg archives Kurt Schrimm told Reuters Television that his authority was forced to investigate "similar cases again, based on article 3 of the constitution which says that everyone needs be treated equally."
"We are an authority to investigate and clear up Nazi crimes, not to persecute them," Schrimm said.
"That will be the task of the state attorney, to decide whether the man or the men are still able to stand trial or not. Our task is first of all to shed light on the cases in order to tell the public what happened."
Schrimm explained that "our main focus is on the so called extermination camps. We will initially ignore the concentration camps, which were at the same time labour camps because evidence would be very, very difficult."
He underlined the importance of so called "task forces" which worked at the camps, adding that "it must be said that we are a little sceptical since these task forces consisted of people who already at the time were of a certain age. So the hope that a lot of them are still alive is relatively small."
Demjanjuk was initially sentenced to death two decades ago in Israel for being the notorious "Ivan the Terrible" camp guard at Treblinka in Poland. The guilty verdict was overturned on appeal by Israel's supreme court in 1993 after new evidence emerged pointing to a case of mistaken identity.
Demjanjuk had been in a German jail since he was extradited from the United States two years ago and his lawyers had sought his release on age and health grounds.
He attended the 18-month court proceedings in Munich -- the birthplace of Adolf Hitler's Nazi movement -- in a wheelchair, and sometimes lying down. He denied the charges but otherwise did not speak at his trial. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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