the "Gate of Death", Reuters |
The successful prosecution of John Demjanjuk in May 2011 set a precedent making it easier to prosecute lower-level Nazis who participated in the Holocaust. Prosecutors need not prove culpability in a specific murder or murders to obtain a conviction. A crucial piece of evidence in Demjanjuk's case was his SS identity card from Sobibor. Critics and Neonazis charge Demjanjuk's conviction amounted to guilt by association. Demjanjuk died awaiting appeal. The move to prosecute still living Nazi guards is in stark contrast to Germany's policy in the 60s and 70s when West German courts acquitted senior SS leaders on the grounds that the Holocaust was primarily the responsibility of national Nazi war criminals. German courts have convicted around 6,650 Nazi war criminals in 36,000 trials since 1947, but most of these occurred before 1950, and most of the sentences handed out were lenient to an embarrassing degree.