Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany drops case against deported former Nazi guard

The United States deported the 95-year-old German man last month, but prosecutor­s in Germany have not found sufficient evidence to prosecute him.

-

German prosecutor­s said on Wednesday that they closed an investigat­ion of a 95-year-old former Nazi concentrat­ion camp guard who was deported from the United States.

Last month, Friedrich Karl B. arrived on a medical transport plane at Frankfurt Airport after a US court ordered his expulsion over alleged compliance with Nazi-sponsored persecutio­n in 1945.

Upon his arrival, prosecutor­s in the northern town of Celle said he was willing to be questioned with a defense lawyer present. They had previously halted a probe of the same man citing a lack of evidence.

Why is Germany dropping the probe?

Prosecutor­s said they closed the case against Friedrich again "after exhausting all evidence," citing a lack of sufficient grounds

for suspicion.

Celle's public prosecutor­s had begun the investigat­ion in September but suspended it three months later, saying the evidence had "not linked the man to a concrete act of killing."

According to US officials, Friedrich had confessed to having guarded prisoners for a period spanning just a few weeks late

in the war at the Neuengamme concentrat­ion camp in northern Germany.

He said he had no part in abuse at the camp or the socalled "death marches" in 1945, when prisoners were forced to march deeper into German territory to escape the advancing Allied forces, often dying or being killed on the way.

Why did the US deport him after Germany first closed the case?

A US judge had concluded that Friedrich contribute­d to Naz i - s p o n s o re d p e rs e c u t i o n through his "willing service as an armed guard of prisoners at a concentrat­ion camp where persecutio­n took place."

Berger had been a US resident since 1959.

The court said prisoners at the Neuengamme facility endured "horrible conditions" in the winter of 1944/1945, leading to the death of 70 prisoners "under inhumane conditions."

A US immigratio­n official said Friedrich had been an "active participan­t in one of the darkest chapters in human history," adding that the United States did not offer protection to "war criminals."

Germany has charged several former Nazis in recent years. Last month, a 100-year-old German man was charged with being an accessory to 3,518 murders at the Sachsenhau­sen concentrat­ion camp.

Editor's note: Deutsche Welle follows the German press code, which stresses the importance of protecting the privacy of suspected criminals or victims and encourages us to refrain from revealing full names in such cases.

 ??  ?? Friedrich Karl B. lived in the US state of Tennessee since 1959 and until his deportatio­n
Friedrich Karl B. lived in the US state of Tennessee since 1959 and until his deportatio­n

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany