Polish court issues arrest warrant for US man in Nazi case | Inquirer News

Polish court issues arrest warrant for US man in Nazi case

/ 02:39 AM March 16, 2017

Mass grave of Nazi victims in Chlaniow in Poland - 19 June 2013

In this photo, taken on June 19, 2013, a woman stands near a mass grave and a monument in the village of Chlaniow, Poland, that holds the bodies of Poles killed in a 1944 attack on the village by the Nazi SS-led Ukrainian Self Defense Legion. The Associated Press has uncovered testimony that says Michael Karkoc, a Minnesota man who was a Ukrainian Self Defense Legion company commander, ordered his men to attack the village, contradicting claims by the man’s family that he was never at the scene of the civilian massacre. Judge Dariusz Abamowicz told the AP on Wednesday March 15, 2017, the regional court in Lublin has issued a warrant after concluding that there is “high probability” the suspect committed war crimes listed by the prosecutors. (Photo by CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP)

WARSAW, Poland — A court in Poland has issued an arrest warrant for a Minnesota man sought in a Nazi massacre, opening the way for Poland to seek his extradition from the United States on war crimes charges.

The Associated Press had previously identified the man as 98-year-old Michael Karkoc, an ex-commander in an SS-led unit that burned Polish villages and killed civilians in World War II.

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Earlier this week, prosecutors from the state Institute of National Remembrance said evidence shows that American citizen Michael K. was a commander of a unit in the SS-led Ukrainian Self Defense Legion that raided eastern Poland’s villages in July 1944.

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They sought an arrest warrant for him from a court in eastern Poland, a step toward extradition. Poland’s justice officials haven’t released the suspect’s last name, in line with Poland’s privacy laws.

Judge Dariusz Abramowicz told the AP Wednesday the regional court in Lublin issued a warrant, based on 13 volumes of evidence, including documents from the US, Germany and Ukraine and from Poland’s archives. He said that the evidence was strong enough for an arrest to be sought.

“In the court’s assessment the evidence presented by the Institute of National Remembrance indicates a high probability that the suspect committed the crimes,” Abramowicz said.

The decision comes four years after the AP published a story establishing that Michael Karkoc commanded the unit, based on wartime documents, testimony from other members of the unit and Karkoc’s own Ukrainian-language memoir.

Karkoc must be present in court in Poland since the country does not recognize trial in absentia. If extradited, he would face a court in Lublin, in eastern Poland.

Abramowicz said there was no information to suggest that health conditions could hamper Karkoc from standing trial. Karkoc’s family in Minneapolis says he suffers from Alzheimer’s disease. The family denies Karkoc was involved in any war crimes.

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Karkoc’s son, Andriy Karkoc, reiterated Wednesday that his father is innocent of any war crimes, and called on the judge to release any evidence that may implicate his father.

Informed of the arrest warrant, he asked rhetorically: “Do they have any evidence on which to base that?”

“We call on the judge to release all evidence that he has that supports this unjust, inappropriate and immoral action,” he told the AP.

Andriy Karkoc also pointed out that German prosecutors declined in 2015 to seek his father’s extradition, concluding he was unfit to stand trial.

It wasn’t immediately clear when Poland’s Justice Ministry would write the extradition motion, which would then be handled by the US Justice Department.

The US State Department referred questions to the Justice Department, and the US Attorney’s Office in Minnesota had no comment on Wednesday.

German prosecutors shelved their own war crimes investigation of Karkoc in 2015 after concluding that he wasn’t fit for trial.

Karkoc’s attorney refused to allow a medical expert from Germany, but instead provided medical documentation from doctors at the geriatric hospital in the U.S. where he was being treated.

Munich prosecutors called the assessment, which covered the span of a year and was evaluated by a German medical expert, “comprehensive.”

The German probe began after the AP’s story in June 2013, which also established that Karkoc had lied to American immigration officials to get into the US a few years after World War II.

The evidence was assessed by Germany’s special federal prosecutors’ unit, which concluded there was enough for state prosecutors to pursue murder charges against Karkoc. –Monika Scislowska

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Steve Karnowski and Doug Glass in Minneapolis, and Dave Rising in Berlin, contributed to this report.

TAGS: Crime

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