Anonymous ID: 299b0b Nov. 24, 2018, 11:11 p.m. No.4021137   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1190

Alleged SS guard charged as accessory to 36,000 deaths at Nazi camp

 

BERLIN – A 95-year-old man has been charged with more than 36,000 counts of being an accessory to murder on allegations that he served as a guard at the Nazis' Mauthausen concentration camp, Berlin prosecutors said Friday. Hans Werner H., whose last name wasn't released because of privacy regulations, is accused of serving as an SS guard in the camp in northern Austria from mid-1944 to early 1945.

 

During that time, 36,223 people were killed at Mauthausen, primarily by gassing, but also by lethal injection, shootings, starvation or exposure, prosecutor Martin Steltner said.

 

The suspect isn't accused of a specific killing, but prosecutors argue that as a guard he helped the camp function. Overall, about 95,000 people are believed to have died in the Mauthausen camp system including 14,000 Jews, but also Soviet prisoners of war, Spaniards who had fought against Gen. Francisco Franco, and others.

 

"With his service as a guard he aided or at least made easier the killing of many thousands of inmates," Steltner said, adding that the suspect denies the charges.

 

Efraim Zuroff, the top Nazi hunter at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, noted that Wiesenthal himself was an inmate at Mauthausen when it was liberated by Americans in May 1945. Wiesenthal died in 2005 after devoting his life to tracking down Nazi war criminals so they could be brought to trial.

 

"In a sense it gives a certain very nice closure that someone like this is brought to justice, which I'm sure would have been Simon's dream," Zuroff said in a telephone interview from Jerusalem.

 

Full Article: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nazi-guard-hans-werner-h-charged-over-36000-deaths-at-mauthausen-concentration-camp/

Anonymous ID: 299b0b Nov. 24, 2018, 11:28 p.m. No.4021222   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4021190

I suspect that we won't be getting any proof of any of it. I posted this to bring the awareness of this as a fresh talking point on a familiar narrative.