
German court still building cases against former Nazis
When two former Nazis who worked at concentration camps recently died aged 99 and 100, many believed the atrocities of the Holocaust were finally at an end.
However, a special court in Germany is still pursuing around a dozen of those who helped the Nazis commit mass murder, eighty years after the end of the Second World War, The Post has learned.
'We are always working on new prosecutions,' said Thomas Will, chief prosecutor at the Central Office of the State Justice Administration for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes in Ludwigsburg, just outside the city of Stuttgart.
The special court has helped to find and prosecute some 7,000 Nazi war criminals since its inception in 1958, according to its website.
9 Polish prisoners pictured after being liberated from the Dachau concentration camp in 1945 at the end of World War 2. The Nazis executed millions of people at camps such as Dachau, including the Holocaust of six million Jewish people.
Everett/Shutterstock
9 Thomas Will, senior public prosecutor and head of the Central Office for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes, stands at filing cabinets in the institution's archive. He says the court is still preparing prosecutions of 'some dozen' accessories of Nazi crimes.
dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images
The court is currently searching for 'accessories to National Socialist crimes' born between 1925 and 1927, who were teenage administrators or guards at camps where the murders of more than 11 million people, including the Holocaust of six million Jews, were perpetrated by the Nazis.
But even those cases are getting difficult to prosecute due to the advancing ages. Last month, the last-known Nazi concentration camp guard died before he was set to face German prosecutors for the murder of more than 3,300 people at Sachsenhausen concentration camp.
Gregor Formanek, 100, was a teenager during his employment at the camp and was to be tried as a minor. He would likely have received a suspended sentence if he had been found guilty.
Another teenage Nazi, Irmgard Furchner, 99, was hired as a shorthand typist at Stutthof concentration camp, working there between 1943 and 1945.
In 2021, when she was 96, she was charged with 11,412 counts of accessory to murder. She was the last person to have been convicted in Germany for Holocaust-era crimes and died in January, although her death was only recently announced. She was given a two-year suspended sentence in 2022.
9 Irmgard Furchner was hired as a shorthand typist at a Nazi concentration camp when she was a teenager. Her trial for accessory to murder began when she was 96, and she was tried as a juvenile. She died earlier this year at 99 years old.
POOL/AFP via Getty Images
9 Gregor Formanek was an SS officer at the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. He died last month just before he was about to face tril for the murder of more than 3,300 people. He was 100 years old.
News Licensing / MEGA
As accessories to Nazi crimes are becoming increasingly difficult to find, one of the world's most celebrated Nazi hunters has gone into retirement.
But Efraim Zuroff, 76, the New York City-born Holocaust historian who headed up the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem, said dozens of former Nazis are still roaming Eastern Europe.
'There are Holocaust criminals in Eastern Europe who have not been prosecuted, since not a single one of the countries which made the transition from Communism to democracy are interested in putting them on trial,' he said.
He told The Post last week officials who helped the Nazis carry out atrocities in Hungary, Lithuania, Croatia, Romania and other Eastern European countries remain at large and have never faced charges.
'Any justice is better than no justice,' said Zuroff. 'But right now there is nothing on the docket in Germany, and countries like Lithuania and others did nothing to bring murderers to justice.'
9 Emaciated prisoners at the Nazi concentration camp Buchenwald in April 1945 shortly after the camp was discovered by allied forces.
Northcliffe Collection/ANL/Shutterstock
9 New York City-born Nazi hunter Efraim Zuroff recently retired although he said he is continuing to work to help stamp out antisemitism.
dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images
Zuroff's latest book, 'Our People: Discovering Lithuania's Hidden Holocaust,' is about Lithuania where his maternal grandparents are from. He co-wrote it with Ruta Vanagaite, a Lithuanian writer whose family members were among the perpetrators of the Holocaust in the country.
During their research they interviewed an elderly woman leaving a supermarket and asked her about her time in the war, causing her to break down in tears because her family had decided not to help hide her best friend, a young Jewish girl.
'She told us that they were more afraid of their neighbors than the Germans because the neighbors would tell on them, so they couldn't hide her Jewish friend,' Zuroff said, adding that his co-writer had to leave the country after revealing hard truths about Lithuanians in the book, which was denounced by the country's leadership.
9 Nazi SS Officer F. Hosler in front of a lorry filled with the bodies of his victims at Belsen concentration camp.
ANL/Daily Mail/Shutterstock
9 Austrian architect Simon Wiesenthal devoted his life to hunting Nazis around the world. In 1983, he prevailed on US president Ronald Reagan to help capture Walter Rauff, the head of the Gestapo, who was was living openly in Chile.
Bettmann Archive
9 Ohio autoworker John Demjanjuk was convicted as an accessory to murder at the Sobibor concentration camp. He was convicted by a German court in 2011 as an accessory to the murder of more than 28,000, and died a year later at a German nursing home.
AP
However, the lady's story 'was just representative of everything that happened in Lithuania during the war,' said Zuroff, adding 'Ninety percent of Jews were killed there.'
Unlike Eastern Europe, the US and Germany were the only countries that actively prosecuted Nazi war criminals, Zuroff claimed. The Department of Justice's Office of Special Investigations investigated 1,700 suspected Nazis in the US and prosecuted 300.
Zuroff began his career as a Nazi hunter when he joined the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles in 1978. In Jerusalem, where he now lives, he held a leading role in 'Operation Last Chance,' a campaign which offered cash for information leading to the conviction of Nazi war criminals. The campaign led to the prosecution of John Demjanjuk, an Ohio autoworker, who was convicted as an accessory to murder at the Sobibor death camp.
Now even in retirement, Zuroff said he is continuing to fight against what he calls Holocaust distortion. He said he is guided by the late Wiesenthal, an Austrian architect who began searching for Nazis right after the end of the Second World War.
Wiesenthal told him although he was not religious, he believed he would meet the victims of the Holocaust in the afterlife and they would ask him what he did to help the victims.
'I'll do anything possible to fight against Holocaust distortion in countries like Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Croatia, Hungary,' Zuroff told The Post.
'It's an insult to the victims and the kind of thing that allowed people to say Hamas were the victims of Oct. 7 not the Jews,' he said referring to the terrorist attack in 2023 that left 1,200 Israelis dead.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
4 hours ago
- New York Post
Suffolk jails forced to hold 125 prisoners set for transfer because of state chaos
Suffolk County's jails are being forced to hold onto 125 felons who were supposed to be transferred upstate — with officials blaming state government chaos for the delay, The Post has learned. County Executive Ed Romaine blamed Gov. Kathy Hochul and said housing a growing number of state prisoners is putting staff in a dangerous situation as taxpayers are on the hook for hundreds of thousands in estimated extra costs. 'They've been convicted and are supposed to be in state prisons and they're not because the state is just not taking them,' Romaine told The Post. Advertisement 'Now, why is the state not taking them?' the Republican added. 'Well, [Hochul] fired 2,000 corrections officers striking for better working conditions and she's closing prisons around the state.' 4 Suffolk County's jails are being forced to hold onto 125 felons who were supposed to be transferred upstate. New York Post Under state law, inmates sentenced to hard time in state prison are supposed to be transferred upstate within 10 business days. But Romaine said that has changed in the aftermath of labor unrest with the corrections officer union and Democratic governor. Advertisement He said the delays are now causing headaches across the system, from administration to the inmates themselves. Most of the detainees in the two county jails — in Riverhead and Yaphank — are people accused of low-level crimes that are being held for trial and have not been convicted. They are now bunking alongside convicted criminals who were intended to only pass through the system. 4 Under state law, inmates sentenced to hard time in state prison are supposed to be transferred upstate within 10 business days. Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine pictured. James Messerschmidt Romaine added that the influx of roughly 125 felons is raising serious safety and management concerns for staff. Advertisement 'Our jail staff are already spread thin,' Romaine wrote in a letter to Gov. Hochul in May obtained by The Post. 'I understand that the state faces similar staffing challenges, but it is unfair to shift this burden to the County with minimal financial compensation and little to no collaboration.' The state Department of Corrections and Community Supervision blamed the backlog on system-halting staffing shortages that were sparked after the state fired 2,000 corrections officers who participated in an unauthorized, nearly month-long strike in March. 4 Romaine added that the influx of roughly 125 felons is raising serious safety and management concerns for staff. Newsday via Getty Images Romaine shot back that the staffing shortages should be Suffolk's problem. Advertisement 'The law says they're state ready, then they need to be in state prisons, not local jails,' he said. New York State is reimbursing Suffolk $100 per day for every inmate stuck in the county jails, but Romaine said the county pays $250 per day for each, meaning taxpayers are on the hook for the extra $150. 'The warden and his staff calculate that we have expended approximately $280,000 in excess of what we have received from the state to house these state ready but unclaimed prisoners since February,' Romaine wrote in the May letter. 4 New York State is reimbursing Suffolk $100 per day for every inmate stuck in the county jails. New York Post More inmates in lockup means more guards are needed to work — with more overtime costs, he added. Romaine warned that if the backlog continues, it could lead to dangerous overcrowding and unravel the work the county has been doing to improve jail conditions. 'This is unsustainable long term,' he said.


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Ex-Louisville star Russ Smith arrested for suspicion of DUI, reckless driving
Louisville Metro Police arrested a former Louisville basketball star early Sunday morning for driving under the influence of alcohol. Russ Smith, a member of the 2013 Louisville basketball team who won the NCAA Tournament that was later vacated, was stopped after police spotted him making a U-turn across multiple lanes and noticed his license plate tag had expired, the Courier Journal reported after viewing the arrest citation. Police detected a 'strong odor of alcoholic beverages' on Smith's breath when they first talked to him, and he failed a field sobriety test after he told officers that he drank 'two bourbon pours neat' before getting behind the wheel, according to the arrest citation. 3 Russ Smith was arrested early Sunday morning. Louisville Metro Corrections 3 Russ Smith looks to pass during Louisville's game in November 2012. Getty Images The Queens native 'swayed' when he stepped out of the car and failed a walk and turn test, WDRB reported. Smith had a 0.073 blood alcohol content, but in the state of Kentucky, drivers can still be prosecuted if they have a BAC of above 0.04 but below 0.08 as long as there is other evidence to support the case. 'That fact may be considered, together with other competent evidence, in determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant,' according to the statute in the state. A police spokesperson told WDRB that 'we will allow the arrest slip to speak for itself,' when asked about Smith's BAC. Smith faces charges of driving under the influence, reckless driving and having unregistered license plates. 3 Russ Smith drives to the basket during Louisville's game in March 2014. Getty Images He was released without bond and is due back in court for an arraignment hearing on June 11 at Jefferson County District Court. WDRB reported that Smith is slated to play in The Basketball Tournament this summer, a winner-take-all tournament with a $1 million prize. Smith played four years at Louisville, and he averaged 14.3 points per game. He had brief NBA stints with the Pelicans and Grizzlies, as well as some time in the G-League and overseas. Smith played his high school ball at Archbishop Molloy in Queens


New York Post
5 hours ago
- New York Post
Cuomo's sister-in-law allegedly used influence to try to help posh Hamptons club
Cristina Cuomo allegedly used her family connections to try to help the posh Surf Lodge in tony Montauk keep its crucial liquor and music licenses, The Post has learned. Long Island's Surf Lodge — owned by Jayma Cardosa, a buddy of ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo's sister-in-law — was fighting to keep its licenses in 2019 amid violations with the State Liquor Authority and local town officials. Cardoso hoped to get then-Gov. Cuomo — through Cristina and her husband Chris Cuomo, Andrew's brother — to 'soften up' then-SLA Chairman Vincent Bradley, who was appointed by Andrew, reveal emails obtained by The Post. Advertisement Cristina emailed Cordoso around that time saying she had spoken to her husband Chris about the Surf Lounge's licensing problems, and the venue owner seemed giddy. 7 Cristina Cuomo allegedly used her family connections to try to help the posh Surf Lodge in tony Montauk keep its liquor and music licenses. Getty Images 'Hopefully Chris Cuomo can speak with w his brother to soften up the chairman. Finger crossed!!! Happy New Year!,' Cordoso told Cristina in her 2019 New Year's response. Advertisement Cristina has held events at the Surf Lodge, and Andrew Cuomo — who resigned as governor over a slew of allegations in 2021 and is now making a comeback bid for New York City mayor — held a re-election fundraiser there in June 2018. Andrew has denied all of the allegations against him. Christina ended up writing a name-dropping letter to Bradley on Feb. 6, 2019, on behalf of Cardoso. 'Dear Vincent, I hope you are well. By way of my husband Chris Cuomo, I got your email from my brother-in-law, Gov. Andrew Cuomo,' Cristina said. She said she was writing on behalf of her 'friend and fellow Brazilian' Cardoso, who faced 'potential license revocation' for overcrowding conditions cited by a fire-marshal inspection during the prior year's Labor Day weekend. Advertisement The SLA had threatened to 'eliminate live music' at the venue as part of a proposed settlement with it so that it could keep the liquor license, the letter said. Cardoso was proposing to bolster security and increase access points into the venue to address the issues, Cristina told the SLA chairman. 7 Cristina has held events at the Surf Lodge, and Andrew Cuomo held a gubernatorial re-election fundraiser there in June 2018. Courtesy of The Surf Lodge 7 Cuomo told The Post through a spokesman that he did not intervene in the situation. Debra L Rothenberg/Shutterstock Advertisement The owner also was willing to reducing live entertainment from seven to three days a week and end it at 8 p.m. every evening as a compromise, the letter said. 'Jayma has brought Grammy Award winning live music and culture to the Hamptons community for 11 years, and has attributed to Montauk's burgeoning tourism while other establishments have come and gone,' Cristina told Bradley in her letter. Cristina, founder of the health+wellness platform Purist that operates in the city and Hamptons, added, 'I cherish our family vacation time out East and the cultural outlets that make our enjoyment of the Hamptons all the more special. 'Thank you for your thoughtful consideration in preserving the arts and culture at The Surf Lodge and the Hamptons as a whole.' 7 Cristina is married to Andrew's brother Chris. WireImage She then offered her phone number to Bradley in case he wanted to discuss the matter further with a call. As it turned out, the SLA's license was renewed. In the settlement pact, the owner agreed to pay $55,000 in civil penalties and limit music to three nights a week, stopping at 8 p.m. Upstate Republican Borrello, who is a restaurateur, said Cristina's letter doesn't pass the ethics smell test. Advertisement 'This letter is trading on the Cuomo name. It's obvious,' said Borrello, who owns five eateries and knows what it's like to face the SLA. 'Andrew Cuomo fancies himself as the ethics czar when he was governor. This type of influence-peddling is certainly hypocritical for the Cuomo family,' he said. 7 Former Gov. Cuomo is now running for New York City mayor. 7 Cristina said she had spoken to her husband about the venue's issues. DMI Advertisement 7 Andrew Cuomo 'certainly took no action' in the licensing issue, his rep said Sunday. AP But Cristina defended her role in trying to help the Surf Lodge owner keep her popular establishment. 'I wrote this as a member of the Hamptons community to help a friend,'' Cristina told The Post on Sunday. 'She was in jeopardy of losing her music license. Advertisement 'I didn't do anything wrong,' Cristina added. Cardoso did not respond to a Post request for comment. Andrew Cuomo is now the front-runner in the Democratic primary for mayor. Advertisement His campaign denied that the ex-governor had intervened in the Surf Lodge based on the letter from his sister-in-law or any other interactions. Through a campaign rep, Cuomo pleaded ignorance on the topic and claimed it's much ado about nothing. 'We knew nothing about this situation and certainly took no action, but the fact this seven year old letter is getting shopped around weeks before Election Day shows just how desperate people are getting — this really is some bottom of the barrel stuff,' said Cuomo spokesman Richard Azzopardi.