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- <text id=93TT2070>
- <title>
- Aug. 02, 1993: Ivan The Not-So-Terrible
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 02, 1993 Big Shots:America's Kids and Their Guns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ISRAEL, Page 41
- Ivan The Not-So-Terrible
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Was John Demjanjuk a victim of mistaken identity?
- </p>
- <p>By LISA BEYER/JERUSALEM--With reporting by Julie Johnson/Washington and Ken Myers/Cleveland
- </p>
- <p> The hunt for a monster can warp the pursuers. The wanted man
- was one of the most loathsome creatures of modern times: "Ivan
- the Terrible," who hacked at his naked victims with a sword
- as he herded them by the thousands into the gas chambers he
- operated at the Nazi death camp Treblinka. American and Israeli
- officials were certain they had found him in John, formerly
- Ivan, Demjanjuk, a retired suburban Cleveland autoworker of
- Ukrainian descent. He was extradited to Israel in 1986, where
- he was convicted of crimes against humanity and condemned to
- hang after a dramatic trial that transfixed the nation.
- </p>
- <p> This week Israel's highest court will finally render its judgment
- on Demjanjuk's appeal, for which hearings were completed just
- over a year ago. Yoram Sheftel, Demjanjuk's lawyer, feels "fully
- confident" his client will go free; Israelis, in fact, are steeling
- themselves for the prospect that what may be the last major
- Nazi war trial will end in failure. New evidence supporting
- Demjanjuk's contention that he was the victim of mistaken identity
- has convinced many observers that while he may be Ivan the Not
- Very Nice, accountable for lesser crimes, Demjanjuk will be
- cleared of the atrocities of Treblinka's notorious Ivan.
- </p>
- <p> Doubts about the case intensified last month when a U.S. federal
- judge, appointed to investigate where Justice Department officials
- had mishandled their prosecution of Demjanjuk concluded that
- there was "substantial doubt" he was Ivan the Terrible. Judge
- Thomas A. Wiseman Jr. criticized government lawyers for being
- insufficiently inquisitive about the facts of the case but
- said their failings fell short of misconduct. In his report
- to the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, Wiseman recommended
- that the extradition be upheld because even if Demjanjuk was
- not at Treblinka, evidence indicated he was an agent of the
- SS nonetheless.
- </p>
- <p> In a case so important, how could the authorities, both American
- and Israeli, have got it so wrong? At the time of Demjanjuk's
- denaturalization, extradition and conviction, they did not have
- the full body of evidence available today: statements made to
- Soviet authorities by 32 former guards and five forced laborers
- at Treblinka, all hailing from what was then the Soviet Union.
- They said a man named Ivan Marchenko was the Ivan of Treblinka.
- Marchenko, like Demjanjuk a native Ukrainian, was last seen
- in Yugoslavia in 1944. The statements of these 37, most of whom
- were executed by the Soviets as Nazi collaborators, were not
- obtained by Israeli courts until 1991. But as early as 1978,
- U.S. officials who handled Demjanjuk's case had the testimony
- of two of the guards, a fact they withheld from Demjanjuk's
- lawyers.
- </p>
- <p> The evidence did seem to indicate that Demjanjuk had been a
- Nazi collaborator: an identity card supplied to the Americans
- by the Soviets, who claimed to have discovered it among German
- documents seized in the war, indicated he had been trained as
- a Wachmann, or guard, for the SS. U.S. officials thought Demjanjuk
- and Marchenko were one and the same. In his 1951 application
- for a U.S. visa, Demjanjuk incorrectly listed his mother's maiden
- name as Marchenko. He said he had forgotten her real name and
- simply selected a common Ukrainian surname, but his choice gave
- rise to speculation that he had used Marchenko as an alias at
- Treblinka.
- </p>
- <p> If Demjanjuk was wrongly convicted in Israel, the trial court's
- mistake was in relying too heavily on the testimony of five
- Treblinka survivors, ages 61 to 86. Their identifications, four
- decades after the events, were made in not entirely neutral
- circumstances. During the initial investigation, they picked
- Demjanjuk from a photo spread in which his picture was disproportionately
- large. They identified him in court after the Israeli media
- had thoroughly covered his extradition. "Of course the survivors
- knew who he was supposed to be," says Tom Segev, author of The
- Seventh Million: The Israelis and the Holocaust. "They'd seen
- him testify in America." Israel's Supreme Court now knows what
- the trial court did not: that there were two men, Ivan Demjanjuk
- and Ivan Marchenko. Judging by photos of the two as young men,
- they shared a similar round face, protruding ears, almond-shaped
- eyes and thin lips.
- </p>
- <p> Though Demjanjuk may not be the Ivan of Treblinka, evidence
- suggests he was a Wachmann elsewhere, notably at the Sobibor
- death camp in Poland. The Supreme Court could convict him on
- those charges or order that he be tried anew. However, scant
- proof exists of what Demjanjuk may have done at the other camps.
- Such a move would also raise questions of selective punishment,
- since Israel has never before sought to prosecute ordinary Wachmanner.
- </p>
- <p> Nazi hunters expect any outcome to be bad news for them. The
- case, says Efraim Zuroff, the Simon Wiesenthal Center's coordinator
- of Nazi war-crimes research, has seriously challenged the testimonial
- value of Holocaust survivors and made it "incredibly difficult"
- to press for the prosecution of Nazi war criminals worldwide.
- He insists the Wiesenthal Center will not lessen its efforts
- to bring these criminals to justice. But he will not say whether
- the organization has made any effort to find Marchenko, the
- true beast, it would seem, of Treblinka. Marchenko, who was
- born in 1911, could well be dead. If he is still alive and free,
- living comfortably in Croatia or Argentina or some American
- suburb, that would be the greatest travesty of the Demjanjuk
- affair.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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