National Post

NAZI suspects collected millions

We should not be dumping our refuse ... on friendly states

- By David Rising, Randy Herschaf t and Richard Lard ner

OSI J EK , Croati a • Dozens of suspected Nazi war criminals and SS guards collected millions of dollars in U.S. Social Security benefits after being forced out of the United States.

The payments flowed through a legal loophole that gave the U.S. Justice Department leverage to persuade Nazi suspects to leave the U.S. If they agreed to go, or simply fled before deportatio­n, they could keep their Social Security, according to interviews and internal U.S. government records.

Among those receiving benefits were armed SS troops who guarded the network of Nazi camps where millions of Jews died; a rocket scientist who used slave labourers to advance his research in the Third Reich; and a Nazi collaborat­or who engineered the arrest and execution of thousands of Jews in Poland.

There are at least four living beneficiar­ies. They include Martin Hartmann, a former SS guard at the Sachsenhau­sen camp in Germany, and Jakob Denzinger, who patrolled the grounds at the Auschwitz camp complex in Poland.

Mr. Hartmann moved to Berlin in 2007 from Arizona just before being stripped of his U.S. citizenshi­p. Mr. Denzinger fled to Germany from Ohio in 1989 after learning denaturali­zation proceeding­s against him were underway. He soon resettled in Croatia and now lives in a spacious apartment on the right bank of the Drava River in Osijek.

Mr. Denzinger would not discuss his situation when questioned. Mr. Denzinger’s son, who lives in the U.S., confirmed his father receives Social Security payments and said he deserved them.

The deals allowed the Justice Department’s former Nazi-hunting unit, the Office of Special Investigat­ions, to skirt lengthy deportatio­n hearings and increased the number of Nazis it expelled from the U.S.

But internal U.S. government records reveal heated objections from the State Department to OSI’s practices.

Social Security benefits became tools, U.S. diplomatic officials said, to secure agreements in which Nazi suspects would accept the loss of citizenshi­p and voluntaril­y leave the United States.

“It’s absolutely outrageous that Nazi war criminals are continuing to receive Social Security benefits when they have been outlawed from our country for many, many, many years,” said U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney of New York, a senior Democratic member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. She said she plans to introduce legislatio­n to close the loophole.

Since 1979, at least 38 of 66 suspects removed from the country kept their Social Security benefits. The Social Security Administra­tion expressed outrage in 1997 over the use of benefits, the documents show, and blowback in foreign capitals reverberat­ed at the highest levels of government.

Austrian authoritie­s were furious upon learning after the fact about a deal made with Martin Bartesch, a former SS guard at the Mauthausen concentrat­ion camp in Austria. In 1987, Mr. Bartesch landed, unannounce­d, in Vienna.

Two days later, under the terms of the deal, his U.S. citizenshi­p was revoked.

“It was not upfront, it was not transparen­t, it was not a legitimate process,” said James Hergen, an assistant legal advisor at the State Department from 1982 until 2007.

“This was not the way America should behave. We should not be dumping our refuse, for lack of a better word, on friendly states.”

 ?? Dar ko Bandic / The Associat ed Press ?? Jakob Denzinger looks from his apartment in Osijek, eastern Croatia. He is among dozens of death camp guards and suspected Nazi war criminals who collected millions in United States social security payments.
Dar ko Bandic / The Associat ed Press Jakob Denzinger looks from his apartment in Osijek, eastern Croatia. He is among dozens of death camp guards and suspected Nazi war criminals who collected millions in United States social security payments.

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