Chicago Sun-Times

Suspected former Auschwitz guard

- | DARKO BANDIC/ AP

ZAGREB, Croatia — Jakob Denzinger, a suspected former Nazi prison guard at Auschwitz and other camps, has died in his native Croatia. He was 91.

The death announceme­nt by Denzinger’s family says he was buried Saturday at a local cemetery near Osijek in eastern Croatia. Local media said he died at hospital on Thursday.

Denzinger was born in present- day Croatia, which was part of Yugoslavia at the time. He started serving with the Nazi SS at the age of 18, in 1942, while Croatia was under a pro- Nazi puppet regime.

He was posted at several camps, including the Auschwitz death camp complex in occupied Poland.

Denzinger moved to the U. S. after the war, settling in Ohio where he became a successful plastics industry executive.

Years later, the Justice Department uncovered his past. In 1989, as U. S. prosecutor­s prepared their case to strip Denzinger of his citizenshi­p, he first fled to Germany and later moved to Croatia.

Denzinger was among dozens of suspected Nazi war criminals and SS guards who collected millions of dollars in U. S. Social Security benefits after being forced out of the United States. An Associated Press investigat­ion into the issue resulted in a law in 2014 barring suspected Nazi war criminals from receiving U. S. government pension benefits.

Croatian authoritie­s in 2014 opened an investigat­ion of Denzinger’s World War II service, but he was never tried. He had refused to comment on the allegation­s.

 ??  ?? Jakob Denzinger looks from his apartment window in Osijek, eastern Croatia, July 28, 2014.
Jakob Denzinger looks from his apartment window in Osijek, eastern Croatia, July 28, 2014.

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