Palij is 68th Nazi Removed from the United States
Jakiw Palij, a former Nazi labor camp guard in
German-occupied Poland and a postwar resident of Queens, New York, has been
removed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to Germany, Attorney
General Jeff Sessions of the U.S. Department of Justice, Secretary Kirstjen M.
Nielsen of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Assistant Attorney General
Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and ICE
Deputy Director and Acting Director Ronald D. Vitiello announced today. ICE removed Palij based on an order of
removal obtained by the Department of Justice in 2004.
“The United States will never be a safe haven for those who
have participated in atrocities, war crimes, and human rights abuses,” said
Attorney General Sessions. “Jakiw Palij
lied about his Nazi past to immigrate to this country and then fraudulently
become an American citizen. He had no
right to citizenship or to even be in this country. Today, the Justice Department—led by Eli
Rosenbaum and our fabulous team in the Human Rights and Special Prosecutions
Section, formerly the Office of Special Investigations—successfully helped
remove him from the United States, as we have done with 67 other Nazis in the
past. I want to thank our partners at
the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security for all of their
hard work in removing this Nazi criminal from our country.”
“Nazi war criminals and human rights violators have no safe
haven on our shores,” said Secretary Kirstjen M. Nielsen of the U.S. Department
of Homeland Security. “We will
relentlessly pursue them, wherever they may be found, and bring them to
justice. The arrest and removal of Jakiw
Palij to Germany is a testament to the dedication and commitment of the men and
women of ICE, who faithfully enforce our immigration laws to protect the
American people.”
Palij, 95, was born in a part of Poland that is situated in
present-day Ukraine, immigrated to the United States in 1949 and became a U.S.
citizen in 1957. He concealed his Nazi service by telling U.S. immigration
officials that he had spent the war years working until 1944 on his father’s
farm in his hometown, which was previously a part of Poland and is now in
Ukraine, and then in a German factory.
As Palij admitted to Justice Department officials in 2001,
he was trained at the SS Training Camp in Trawniki, in Nazi-occupied Poland, in
the spring of 1943. Documents subsequently filed in court by the Justice
Department showed that men who trained at Trawniki participated in implementing
the Third Reich’s plan to murder Jews in Poland, code-named “Operation
Reinhard.” On Nov. 3, 1943, some 6,000 Jewish men, women and children
incarcerated at Trawniki were shot to death in one of the largest single
massacres of the Holocaust. By helping to prevent the escape of these prisoners
during his service at Trawniki, Palij played an indispensable role in ensuring
that they later met their tragic fate at the hands of the Nazis.
On May 9, 2002, the Criminal Division’s then-Office of
Special Investigations (OSI) and the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Eastern
District of New York filed a four-count complaint in the U.S. District Court
for the Eastern District of New York, to revoke Palij’s citizenship. The complaint was based primarily upon his
wartime activities as an armed guard of Jewish prisoners at Trawniki, who were
confined there under inhumane conditions.
Palij’s U.S. citizenship was revoked in August 2003 by a federal judge
in the Eastern District of New York based on his wartime activities and postwar
immigration fraud. In November 2003, the
government placed Palij in immigration removal proceedings.
In decisions issued on June 10 and Aug. 23, 2004, U.S.
Immigration Judge Robert Owens ordered Palij’s deportation to Ukraine, Poland
or Germany, or any other country that would admit him, on the basis of his
participation in Nazi-sponsored acts of persecution while serving during World
War II as an armed guard at the Trawniki forced-labor camp in Nazi-occupied
Poland under the direction of the government of Germany and his subsequent
concealment of that service when he immigrated to the United States. As Judge
Owens wrote in his decision ordering Palij’s deportation, the Jews massacred at
Trawniki “had spent at least half a year in camps guarded by Trawniki-trained
men, including Jakiw Palij.” In December
2005, the Board of Immigration Appeals denied Palij’s appeal.
The removal of Palij to Germany was effectuated through
close cooperation between the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security and
State. For nearly four decades, the Justice Department has vigorously pursued
its mission to expel Nazi persecutors from the United States. The Palij case was the product of the
Department’s longtime efforts to identify, investigate and take legal action
against participants in Nazi crimes of persecution who reside in the United
States. Since OSI began operations in 1979, that office and its successor, the
Human Rights and Special Prosecutions Section (HRSP) of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, have won cases against 108 individuals who
participated in Nazi crimes of persecution. In addition, attempts to enter the
United States by more than 180 individuals implicated in wartime Axis crimes
have been prevented as a result of the “Watch List” program initiated by OSI
and enforced in cooperation with the Departments of State and Homeland
Security.
This removal was supported by ICE’s Enforcement and Removal
Operations and Office of the Principal Legal Advisor as well as the Human
Rights Violators and War Crimes Center (HRVWCC). The HRVWCC is comprised of ICE HSI’s Human
Rights Violators and War Crimes Unit, ICE’s Human Rights Law Section, FBI’s
International Human Rights Unit and HRSP.
Established in 2009, the HRVWCC furthers the government’s efforts to identify,
locate and prosecute human rights abusers in the United States, including those
who are known or suspected to have participated in persecution, war crimes,
genocide, torture, extrajudicial killings, female genital mutilation and the
use or recruitment of child soldiers. The HRVWCC leverages the expertise of a
select group of agents, lawyers, intelligence and research specialists,
historians and analysts who direct the government’s broader enforcement efforts
against these offenders.
The case was investigated, litigated and supervised over the
years by a host of attorneys and historians in OSI, the U.S. Attorney’s Office
in the Eastern District of New York, and HRSP, including Director Eli M.
Rosenbaum, Senior Trial Attorney Susan L. Siegal and Chief Historian Dr.
Jeffrey Richter, all of whom have served with HRSP since its 2010 creation.
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