NAZI-HUNT METHODS PROTESTED

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200021-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 6, 2010
Sequence Number: 
21
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 23, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200021-0.pdf108.54 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/06: CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200021-0 AR:1 ^!,E APPEAR ON Plot /a - / / i+'ASHINGTON POST ---3 :larch 1985 STAT NazFHUflt Methods Protests Ethnic Coalition Objects to Soviet Evidence, Lack of Juries By Jay Mathews Washington Post Staff Writer LOS ANGELES, March 22-A coalition of American ethnic organ- izations, alarmed by the Justice De- partment's hunt for war criminals among Eastern European emi- grants, today launched a protest against use of Soviet-collected ev- idence and denial of jury trials in such U.S. investigations. Current and former department officials said the 10-group alliance, which claims potentially strong sup- port in Congress and the backing of 35 million Americans of Eastern European descent, could cripple the recently revived effort to find for- mer Nazis and Nazi collaborators in the United States. One former Justice Department Nazi hunter, New York attorney Eli Rosenbaum, said he is so concerned about what he considers a rampant- ly anti-Semitic campaign by the Co- alition for Constitutional Justice and Security that he has spent much of his free time trying to alert Jewish groups to it. Eastern European ethnic commu- nity leaders told a news conference here today that, in trying to prove their case, they plan to use testimo- ny of former Soviet agents and re- cent U.S. court opinions disallowing the use of Soviet evidence. Moscow "has infiltrated the American justice system to get even with former refugees, de- fectors and 'anti-Soviet' activists," Anthony B. Mazeika, vice president of the Los Angeles-based Baltic American Freedom League, said in an interview. The coalition, after conversations with Reagan administration officials and a letter-writing campaign direc- ted at the White House and the State and Justice departments, is preparing to lobby Congress for hearings and changes in a 1978 law that provides for deportation of Nazi collaborators. The group, founded Jan. 12 dur- ing a meeting in Washington, has won a Veterans of Foreign Wars resolution calling for an investiga- tion of the office of special investi- gations (OSI) at the justice Depart- ment, and a similar resolution is expected to pass the Michigan Sen- ate soon. The OSI, established in 1979 to investigate a rash of war criminal reports, recently has intensified its search for Auschwitz doctor Josef Mengele, considered the most no- torious surviving Nazi war criminal, and for clues of possible postwar connections between Menuele and U.S. intelligence officers. Justice Department officials, un- der agreements worked out in Mos- cow in 1977, 1978 and 1980, have visited the Soviet Union to collect depositions or videotaped testimony from witnesses of wartime collab- oration by persons who later immi- grated to the United States. Many of the incidents occurred in Latvia, Lithuania and the Ukraine, where anticommunist and anti-Se- mitic sentiment led many people to cooperate with German occupation forces. Martin Mendelsohn, a former Justice Department official who conducted the initial discussions in Moscow, said careful checks showed that evidence provided by the Soviets was authentic. U.S. courts, he said, remain free to dis- regard it if they have doubts. Baltic American Freedom League president Val Pavlovskis, a Latvian-born city planner and for- mer U.S. Marine officer, called the Soviet cooperation "official system- atic disinformation." Rosenbaum and OSI director Neal Sher said the Soviet testimony has satisfied U.S. judicial review in nearly every case. Sher told the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith that the "KGB defense" has been used sev- eral times during war crimes trials in West Germany and that "not once to my knowledge" has a court there "found that the Soviets supplied forged documents or suborned per- jury." A few U.S. judges have rejected Soviet evidence, however. Among them is 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Thomas Tang, who in January reversed an order to de- port accused Latvian collaborator Edgars Laipenieks. "We find that the procedural ir- regularities caused by the Soviet participation in the procurement of the deposition testimony cast the reliability of such testimony into doubt," Tang said. "The Soviet of- ficer frequently and sharply cur- tailed defense counsel's opportunity to cross-examine the deposition witness" and referred in the pres- ence of the witness to "Nazi crim- inal Laipenieks." Imants Lesinskis, a Latvian-born defector and former Soviet diplo- mat, said Moscow is sophisticated in dealing with U.S. prosecutors and will select targets for damaging testimony carefully but will make sure that the Americans "are not getting the true picture." He ac- knowledged that he has no evidence of specific Soviet fabrications. Rosenbaum said that emigrant leaders speak of "due process" when addressing public forums in English but that anti-Semitic sen- timent "is rampant" in their native- language newspapers. He cited ref- erences in a Lithuanian-language paper to Jews' being "the first to torture and murder the hospitable Lithuanians" and to the OSI's being controlled by "the Jewish lobby." Mazeika strongly denied that the coalition is anti-Semitic. He said his group and others seek Jewish sup- port on grounds that Soviet officials providing evidence to the OSI "were the same ones who are send- ing prisoners of conscience, includ- ing many Jews, to the Gulags." Nearly all U.S. hearings for ac- cused collaborators have been with- out juries, because the penalties mWd STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/06: CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200021-0