Acting on a 2004 deportation order, the Immigration and Customs
Enforcement took Jakiw Palij, now 95, into custody and sent him
to Germany, the White House said in a statement.
Palij was born in Poland and immigrated to the U.S. in 1949,
becoming a United States citizen eight years later, the White
House statement said. But he concealed his Nazi service when he
immigrated, the statement said.
In 2001, Palij told Department of Justice officials that he had
trained at the Nazi SS Training Camp in Trawniki, in
German-occupied Poland, in 1943, the White House said.
A federal judge revoked his U.S. citizenship in 2003 and he was
ordered deported in 2004. But no European country would accept
him, according to reports by CNN and New York magazine.
Palij served as a guard at the Trawniki Labor Camp, where 6,000
Jewish men, women and children were shot dead on Nov. 3, 1943,
in one of the single largest massacres of the Holocaust, the
White House said.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee, editing by Larry
King)
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