RACINE, Wis. Two government lawyers knocked at the door of a brick, ranch-style house here two years ago and, getting no answer, wandered around back. There they found an old man sitting alone on a patio chair. He wore a cap to shield himself from the afternoon sun. He noticed that one of the lawyers was pregnant, and he cleaned off another chair. Sit down, he said. Josias Kumpf had been living in the United States for nearly half a century. He had been an American citizen for 40 years. He had married, raised five children and worked for 35 years stuffing sausage at a factory in Chicago. Retired and a widower, his health failing, he was living at his daughter's home in Racine.
His visitors were prosecutors from the Justice Department. They had come to inquire about his immigration status. There was a more urgent matter too, but before they could get to it, they recalled, Kumpf, 80, laughed out loud. He knew why they were there. Without prompting, he snapped them a "Sieg Heil" salute. They talked for more than an hour, and Kumpf signed a four-page, 17-point, handwritten sworn statement that the lawyers drafted right there on the patio.
Yes, he had been a "soldier for Hitler." Yes, he had served in the feared Nazi SS corps and stood sentry over Jewish prisoners as an SS Death's Head guard in concentration camps in Poland.
But, he added, "I have nothing to hide. I don't do nothing to nobody. My fingers are clean."
In May, Kumpf became the 100th former Nazi successfully prosecuted by the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations. A federal judge in Milwaukee ordered his citizenship revoked and, should his appeals fail, Kumpf will be deported.
The Justice unit was formed in 1979 to identify, hunt down and remove former Nazis who came into the United States after World War II. With a staff of lawyers and historians, the office found Kumpf after matching newfound Axis records and SS muster rolls with U.S. immigration documents.
In all such cases, federal officials are racing the clock. Just as America's World War II veterans are dying, so are those who fought on the other side. And so too are the concentration camp survivors who might be able to identify their persecutors.
As memories fade, accounts of individual atrocities become murky. So it may never be known for sure what role Kumpf played on Nov. 3, 1943, at the Trawniki labor camp in Poland.
Click for Full Text!
Poster Comment:
The semitic thirst for revenge against the people who challenged their supremacy is ceaseless.
Of course it is all based on a lie, but if you question the lie you may end up in prison. As courts in Australia and Canada and Germany and elsewhere have ruled:
THE TRUTH IS NO DEFENSE
Ernst Zündel - The Man, His Deeds & His Writings
A NEW RELIGION: HOLOCAUST AND HISTORY
Holocaust Revisionism in One Easy Lesson
Books On-Line
Remarkable Nonsense about the Holocaust
David Cole Interviews Dr. Franciszek Piper, Director, Auschwitz State Museum
The Rudolf Report
Expert Report on Chemical and Technical Aspects of the Gas Chambers of Auschwitz