This
undated photo shows the main gate of the Nazi concentration camp
Auschwitz I, which was liberated by the Russians in January 1945.
Writing at the gate reads: "Arbeit macht frei" (Work makes free - or
work liberates).
“Dozens of suspected Nazi war criminals and SS guards collected millions
of dollars in Social Security payments after being forced out of the
United States,” an
Associated Press investigation has found.
The payments flowed through a legal loophole that has
given the U.S. Justice Department leverage to persuade Nazi suspects to
leave. If they agreed to go, or simply fled before deportation, they
could keep their Social Security, according to interviews and internal
government records.
Many of the suspects lied about their Nazi pasts to enter the U.S. after
the end of World War II, and later became American citizens. Among
those who benefited:
— Armed SS troops who guarded the Nazi network of camps where millions of Jews perished.
— An SS guard who took part in the brutal liquidation of the Warsaw
ghetto in Nazi-occupied Poland that killed as many as 13,000 Jews.
— A Nazi collaborator who engineered the arrest and execution of thousands of Jews in Poland.
— A German rocket scientist accused of using slave labor to build the
V-2 rocket that pummeled London. He later won NASA’s highest honor for
helping to put a man on the moon.
The
AP's report
is the result of over two years of interviews, research and analysis of
records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act and other
sources.
No comments:
Post a Comment