View Full Version : Revoke the citizenship of an 81 year-old?
Kirin Fenrir
04-15-2004, 04:16 PM
Source (http://www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/04/15/nazi.guard.ap/index.html)
CAMDEN, New Jersey (AP) -- A federal judge has revoked the citizenship of a retired blueberry farmer because of his past as a Nazi guard during World War II.
The Justice Department said Andrew Kuras, 81, of Mays Landing, served as a guard at three concentration camps in the 1940s.
Officials said Kuras concealed his Nazi past when he entered the United States in 1951 and when he became a citizen 11 years later.
The judge entered the court order Tuesday.
"No one who assisted the Nazi regime in its persecution of innocent civilians is entitled to the privilege of United States citizenship," prosecutor Christopher A. Wray said in a statement Wednesday.
In a 2002 interview with the Press of Atlantic City, Kuras said he did not kill or hurt anyone and that he did not remember specific duties he had as a guard.
A Justice Department spokesman said the government had not decided whether to try to have Kuras deported.
Calls placed Wednesday to the office of Kuras' lawyer were not answered.
Didn't know where best to put this...move it if you see fit. :)
LV426
04-15-2004, 04:28 PM
A bit more detail on the subject.
FEDERAL JUDGE REVOKES CITIZENSHIP OF NEW JERSEY MAN
WHO SERVED AS GUARD AT NAZI SLAVE LABOR CAMPS (http://www.usdoj.gov/opa/pr/2004/April/04_crm_234.htm)
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Assistant Attorney General Christopher A. Wray of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Christopher J. Christie of the District of New Jersey announced today that U.S. District Court Judge Joseph E. Irenas in Camden, New Jersey, has revoked the U.S. citizenship of Andrew Kuras, 81, of Mays Landing, who admitted serving during World War II as an armed guard at three Nazi slave labor camps and further admitted to concealing that service at the time he immigrated to the United States.
“No one who assisted the Nazi regime in its persecution of innocent civilians is entitled to the privilege of United States citizenship,” said Assistant Attorney General Wray.
“As a former armed guard at Nazi slave labor camps, whose admitted duty was to prevent the escape of Jewish prisoners from those camps, Andrew Kuras was never eligible to enter this country or obtain United States citizenship,” said Eli M. Rosenbaum, Director of the Justice Department’s Office of Special Investigations (OSI), which, along with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in New Jersey, brought the case against Kuras.
“Justice for the victims of the Holocaust compels us to pursue those who abetted the Nazis’ genocidal plans -- a mission that has not diminished in importance with the passage of time,” said Christopher J. Christie, the United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey.
Kuras did not dispute documents filed with the court that showed that after he entered German service in December 1942, he trained at the Nazi-operated Trawniki Training Camp in German-occupied Poland, where men were trained to participate in implementing the Third Reich’s plan to murder Jews in Poland, code-named “Operation Reinhard.” The men who were trained at Trawniki served in various capacities, including as armed guards at Nazi slave labor camps. According to documents filed with the court, Kuras admitted serving as an armed guard at three Nazi slave labor camps for Jews in German-occupied Poland: the SS Labor Camp Trawniki, located adjacent to the Trawniki Training Camp; the SS Labor Camp Poniatowa; and the SS Labor Camp Dorohucza. Papers filed by the government noted that Dorohucza was a particularly brutal camp where Jews were forced to work and live under horrific conditions. The documents also reflect that Kuras guarded the prisoners at these three forced labor camps until a few weeks prior to the two-day period of November 3-4, 1943, when more than 20,000 men, women and children incarcerated at Trawniki, Poniatowa and Dorohucza were shot to death in one of the largest single massacres of the Holocaust.
Kuras immigrated to the United States in 1951 and became a U.S. citizen in 1962. He has admitted that he concealed his Nazi service by telling U.S. officials that he had spent the war years as a farmer in his hometown in Poland and then in a town in Germany.
The case was litigated by OSI Trial Attorneys Hillary Davidson and Adam Fels and by Michael Chagares, Civil Chief of the United States Attorney’s Office in Newark.
The denaturalization of Kuras is a result of OSI's ongoing efforts to identify, investigate and take legal action against former participants in Nazi persecution who reside in the United States. Since OSI began operations in 1979, it has won cases against 94 individuals who assisted in Nazi persecution. In addition, 170 individuals who sought to enter the United States in recent years have been blocked from doing so as a result of OSI's “Watch List” program, which is enforced in cooperation with the Department of Homeland Security.
WhiteCrowUK
04-15-2004, 05:43 PM
On the whole this seems a bit pointless.
I would be the first to say the Holocaust was terrible, and those involved should be given no hiding place. But really it does feel like too little too late. And although the man was no doubt involved within the complicity of the concentration camps - theres no evidence he did anything monsterous like taking pot shots at prisoners.
I half expect a long legal battle with the man passing away peacefully before it comes to a conclusion...
Tiamot
04-20-2004, 01:41 PM
People scream about all the Jews and such that were hurt and victimized, but it seems to me that the Nazi's even vicitimized themselves. They have to live with the guilt of what they did, and it seems that they were just human beings; not all of them evil remorseless bastards.
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