Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsNational

Demjanjuk loses appeal to avoid war crimes trial in Germany

Justice Stevens denies the retired autoworker's bid to avoid extradition. The alleged 'Nazi persecutor' had argued that the flight from Cleveland would amount to torture because of his ill health.

May 08, 2009|David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — John Demjanjuk, who allegedly aided in the murder of 29,000 Jews at a German-run death camp in Poland, was denied an emergency appeal by a Supreme Court justice Thursday, all but clearing the way for him to be sent to Germany to stand trial for war crimes.

Justice John Paul Stevens, who handles emergency appeals from Ohio, denied Demjanjuk's appeal without comment. His lawyer could ask another justice to intervene, but the result is not likely to change.


Advertisement

The Ukrainian-born Demjanjuk was a Soviet soldier who was captured by the Germans during World War II and then allegedly volunteered to work in the Sobibor death camp.

Lawyers for Demjanjuk argued that the chronically ill 89-year-old retired autoworker would suffer "severe pain and suffering" akin to torture if he was flown from Cleveland to Munich. As their legal basis for the claim, they cited the Convention Against Torture. The treaty forbids the United States from returning a person to another country where he would be "in danger of being subjected to torture."

U.S. officials dismissed the claim as frivolous. They referred to Demjanjuk as "a Nazi persecutor" who "grasps for a last straw to delay this matter further so that he can continue to enjoy his life in America until his dying day." Demjanjuk's lawyers said their client had multiple ailments, including a spinal condition, that made travel extremely painful.

The legal battle over his medical condition was fought with dueling videos.

In one, cited by his family, Demjanjuk is shown with his head back and mouth agape, gasping for air and moaning in pain, as he is carried out of his home in April. He was returned home hours later after an appeals court in Cincinnati agreed to consider an emergency appeal.

Secretly recorded videos later showed him walking slowly from his car into a store. He then returned and, with some help, got back into the car.

Last Friday, after reviewing evidence of his medical condition, the appeals court agreed that Demjanjuk could be deported. The U.S. government "will transport [him in] an aircraft equipped as a medical air ambulance," the judges said.

The government's legal battle with Demjanjuk has stretched over 32 years. The Justice Department moved to revoke his citizenship in 1977, saying he lied when he entered this country by concealing his role as a guard at Nazi death camps.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|