Word: demjanjuk
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...Nazi guard, Ivan earned his sobriquet by ushering thousands of prisoners - sometimes hacking them with a sword as they passed - into the gas chambers at Poland's Treblinka death camp. After the war, he vanished. Decades later, in the late 1970s, U.S. authorities fingered a suspect: John Demjanjuk, a retired autoworker residing in a Cleveland suburb...
...inflating the potential value of McClellan's testimony. McClellan himself hired the high-profile husband-and-wife legal team of Michael and Jane Tigar to defend him in case the Administration does try to play hardball. The Tigars specialize in defending unpopular clients - from accused Nazi camp guard John Demjanjuk to Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols and terrorist lawyer Lynne Stewart...
ORDERED DEPORTED. JOHN DEMJANJUK, 85, retired autoworker accused of being a Nazi concentration-camp guard; in a decision that could end a court battle dating back to the 1970s; by a federal judge who rejected his claim that he would be tortured if sent back to his native Ukraine; in Cleveland, Ohio. Demjanjuk was convicted in 1988 by an Israeli court of being "Ivan the Terrible," but was cleared and had his U.S. citizenship restored. His citizenship was again withdrawn when, in 2002, new evidence convinced a federal court that he was a different camp guard...
...ORDERED DEPORTED. JOHN DEMJANJUK, 85, retired autoworker accused of being a Nazi concentration camp guard; in a decision that could end a court battle dating back to the 1970s; by a U.S. judge who rejected his claim that he would be tortured if sent back to his native Ukraine; in Cleveland, Ohio. Demjanjuk was convicted in 1988 by an Israeli court of being "Ivan the Terrible," but he was cleared and had his U.S. citizenship restored. His citizenship was again withdrawn when, in 2002, new evidence convinced a U.S. court that he was a different camp guard...
REVOKED. U.S. citizenship of JOHN DEMJANJUK, 81, retired autoworker long believed to be a former Nazi death-camp guard; for the second time in 21 years; in Cleveland, Ohio. His 1988 death sentence in Israel was eventually overturned, and he re-entered the U.S. in 1993. The evidence this time, said a federal judge, was "devastating...