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Sobibor survivor Thomas Blatt, who does not remember Demjanjuk himself at the camp but is to testify in January in general about his experiences, said he had expected trial sessions to be canceled. "It's tiring to lie down a whole day in front of so many people, so I guess he wanted a break," Blatt said cynically. Demjanjuk's attorney Ulrich Busch filed a written motion Wednesday to have the case against him thrown out, arguing that Polish investigators in 2007, working from the same evidence, determined there was not enough proof to proceed to trial. Busch said he argued in the motion that European Union rules prohibit the German investigation from going forward without any new evidence if prosecutors had elsewhere in the bloc had decided to drop it. Alt told The AP he did not know when the court would rule on the motion, but suggested it could make a decision before the trial is scheduled to resume Dec. 21. Similar motions filed by Busch ahead of the trial have been rejected.
[Associated
Press;
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