DETMOLD,
Germany (AP) — A 94-year-old former SS sergeant was found guilty Friday
of 170,000 counts of accessory to murder and sentenced to five years in
prison for serving as an Auschwitz guard, in a verdict that survivors
from the Nazi death camp hailed as a long overdue victory.
Reinhold
Hanning, sitting in a wheelchair, listened attentively but showed no
reaction as Presiding Judge Anke Grudda read the ruling in state court
in Detmold, Germany.
She
said Hanning was a cog in a “perfectly functioning machinery” of
destruction, helping operate the death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland
where some 1.1 million people, primarily Jews, were killed.
“You
were in Auschwitz for two and a half years and performed an important
function,” she said. “You were part of a criminal organization and took
part in criminal activity in Auschwitz,” she said.
Auschwitz
survivor Hedy Bohm, who came from Toronto to testify at the trial and
for the verdict, said she was “grateful and pleased by this justice
finally after 70 years.”
“It is my dream to be in Germany, in a German court, with German judges acknowledging the Holocaust,” the 88-year-old said.
Bohm
was one of four survivors present for the verdict, who also joined the
trial as co-plaintiffs as allowed under German law. Overall, about a
dozen survivors testified during the four- month trial, and 58 survivors
or their relatives joined as co-plaintiffs.
In
her ruling, Grudda said much of their testimony put to rest any
criticism that the crimes of the Nazis were too far in the past to
prosecute today.
“Anyone
who had the opportunity to hear the testimony of the co-plaintiffs can
answer the question of importance of such a trial,” she said.
Hanning’s
attorney, Andreas Scharmer, suggested an appeal was likely, and Hanning
won’t have to serve any prison time until his appeals are exhausted.
He
had faced a maximum of 15 years. Hanning’s defense had called for an
acquittal, saying there is no evidence he killed or beat anyone, while
prosecutors sought a six-year sentence.
Scharmer said he was not surprised by the verdict.
“I didn’t expect the court to have the courage for an acquittal,” he said.
In
sentencing Hanning, Grudda said “there is no appropriate punishment”
for his crimes, but that the court had to follow guidelines and also
take into account his age, his statement of remorse, and the length of
time that had elapsed since the crimes.
“We cannot, and should not punish him symbolically for all the perpetrators of the Holocaust,” she said.
Hanning
had testified that he volunteered for the SS at age 18 and served in
Auschwitz from January 1942 to June 1944, but said he was not involved
in the killings.
“It
disturbs me deeply that I was part of such a criminal organization,” he
told the court in April. “I am ashamed that I saw injustice and never
did anything about it and I apologize for my actions.”
Following
the verdict, Leon Schwarzbaum, a 95-year-old Auschwitz survivor from
Berlin, said he had slipped Hanning’s attorney a letter urging him to
have his client detail more about what he knew about the death camp’s
operations for the sake of educating younger generations.
“Mr.
Hanning should have said more about what he saw in Auschwitz and what
he did in Auschwitz — he did not tell what Auschwitz was,” Schwarzbaum
said.
“It was a hell on earth.”
Hanning
joined the Hitler Youth with his class in 1935 at age 13, then
volunteered at 18 for the Waffen SS in 1940 at the urging of his
stepmother. He fought in several battles in World War II before being
hit by grenade splinters in his head and leg during close combat in Kiev
in 1941.
He
told the court that as he was recovering from his wounds he asked to be
sent back but his commander decided he was no longer fit for front-line
duty, and so sent him to Auschwitz, without his knowing what it was.
Though
there was no evidence Hanning was responsible for a specific crime, he
was tried under new legal reasoning that as a guard he helped the death
camp operate, and thus could be tried for accessory to murder.
The
same argument was used last year against SS sergeant Oskar Groening, to
convict him of 300,000 counts of accessory to murder for serving in
Auschwitz. Germany’s highest appeals court is expected to rule on the
validity of the Groening verdict sometime this summer.
The
precedent for both the Groening and Hanning cases was set in 2011, with
the conviction in Munich of former Ohio autoworker John Demjanjuk on
allegations he served as a Sobibor death camp guard. Although Demjanjuk
always denied serving at the death camp and died before his appeal could
be heard, it opened a wave of new investigations by the special
prosecutor’s office in Ludwigsburg responsible for Nazi war crime
probes.
The
head of the office, Jens Rommel, said two other Auschwitz cases are
still pending trial — another guard and also the commandant’s radio
operator — contingent on their health, and a third is still being
investigated by Frankfurt prosecutors.
Rommel’s
office, which has no power to bring charges itself, has also
recommended charges in three Majdanek death camp cases, and has sent
them on to prosecutors who are now investigating.
Meantime,
the office is still poring through documents for both death camps, and
is also looking into former members of the so-called Einsatzgruppen
mobile death squads, and guards at several concentration camps.
Efraim
Zuroff, the head Nazi-hunter at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said he
hoped the Hanning verdict would give German authorities the impetus to
expedite the remaining cases.
“The
Hanning verdict highlights the important role played by all those who
served in the death camps,” he said in a telephone interview from
Jerusalem. “Without them the crimes of the Nazis could never have
reached the levels that they did.”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/verdict-coming-german-trial-former-auschwitz-guard-061136681.html
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