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"As our numbers
-- those of the victims -- have also rapidly dwindled, this represents the final opportunity to witness justice carried out in our lifetimes," he said. "Time is the enemy here." Immediately after the war, top Nazis such as Hermann Goering were convicted at war crimes trials run by the Allied powers, while investigations of the lower ranks eventually fell to German courts. But there was little political will to aggressively pursue the prosecutions, and many of the trials ended with short sentences, or the acquittal, of suspects in greater positions of responsibility than Demjanjuk allegedly had. For example, Karl Streibel -- the commandant of the SS camp Trawniki where Demjanjuk allegedly was trained
-- was tried in Hamburg but acquitted in 1976 after the judges ruled it hadn't been proven that he knew what the guards being trained would be used for. But the current generation of prosecutors and judges in Germany has shown a new willingness to pursue even the lower ranks, something applauded by Zuroff. "Our goal is to bring as many people to justice as possible," Zuroff said. "They shouldn't be let off if they're less than Mengele, less than Himmler ... in a tragedy of this scope, their escaping justice should not in any way mean that people of a lesser level would be ignored." Working in favor of the new investigators is the fact that most suspects would likely have lived openly under their own names for decades, thinking they had no prosecutions to fear. Those who are harder to locate will be the focus of the Wiesenthal center's new appeal, which Zuroff said would include reward money for information that helps uncover a suspect. On the other hand, Schrimm said it only makes sense to try to bring new cases to trial once the Demjanjuk case is through the appeals process, rather than expend all the resources needed to charge a suspect only to have the case thrown out if Demjanjuk wins. But the appeal could still take at least another six months to a year
-- or longer -- and the suspects are not getting any younger. "It's very clear that they're old; that's why we're preparing everything now so that as soon as there is a final decision, we can move immediately with charges," Schrimm said. Zuroff said he hoped that the appeal could somehow be fast-tracked so that new charges against others could be filed before it is too late. "This ... is a test for the German judicial system to see if they can expedite this in an appropriate manner to enable these cases to go forward," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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