Expelled Nazis got millions in US Social Security
Money flows through legal loophole that persuaded war suspects to leave
Dozens of suspected Nazi war criminals and former SS guards collected millions of dollars in US Social Security benefits after being forced out of the United States, an Associated Press investigation has found.
The payments flowed through a legal loophole that gave the US Justice Department leverage to persuade Nazi suspects to leave the United States. If they agreed to go or left before deportation, they could keep their Social Security, according to interviews and US government records.
Among those receiving benefits were SS guards at concentration camps where millions of Jews perished; a rocket scientist who used slave laborers to advance his research in the Third Reich; and a Nazi collaborator who engineered the arrest and execution of thousands of Jews in Poland.
Four beneficiaries are still alive, including Martin Hartmann, a former SS guard at the Sachsenhausen camp in Germany, and Jakob Denzinger, who guarded the Auschwitz camp complex in Poland.
Hartmann moved to Berlin in 2007 from Arizona just before being stripped of his US citizenship. Denzinger fled to Germany from Ohio in 1989 after learning denaturalization proceedings against him were underway. He resettled in Croatia and now lives in a spacious apartment in Osijek. Denzinger would not discuss his situation when questioned by an AP reporter.
Denzinger's son, who lives in the US, confirmed his father receives Social Security payments and said he deserved them.
The deals allowed the Justice Department's former Nazi-hunting unit, the Office of Special Investigations, to skirt lengthy deportation hearings and increased the number of Nazis it expelled from the US.
Loss of citizenship
But government records obtained by the AP reveal heated objections from the State Department to OSI's practices. Social Security benefits became tools, US diplomatic officials said, to secure agreements in which Nazi suspects would accept the loss of citizenship and voluntarily leave the US.
"It's absolutely outrageous that Nazi war criminals are continuing to receive Social Security benefits when they have been outlawed from our country for many, many, many years," said Carolyn Maloney, a senior member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
She said she plans to introduce legislation to close the loophole.
Since 1979, the AP analysis found, at least 38 of 66 suspects removed from the country kept their Social Security benefits.
The Social Security Administration expressed outrage in 1997 over the use of benefits, the documents show, and reaction in foreign capitals reverberated at the highest levels of government.
Austrian authorities were furious upon learning after the fact about a deal made with Martin Bartesch, a former SS guard at the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria. In 1987, Bartesch landed, unannounced, at the airport in Vienna. Two days later, under the terms of the deal, his US citizenship was revoked.
Nazi dumping
The Romanian-born Bartesch, who had emigrated to the US in 1955, was suddenly stateless and Austria's problem. Bartesch continued to receive Social Security benefits until he died in 1989.
"It was not upfront, it was not transparent, it was not a legitimate process," said James Hergen, an assistant legal adviser at the State Department from 1982 until 2007. "This was not the way America should behave. We should not be dumping our refuse, for lack of a better word, on friendly states."
Neal Sher, a former OSI director, said the State Department cared more about diplomatic niceties than holding former members of Hitler's war machine accountable.
Amid the objections, the practice known as "Nazi dumping" stopped. But the benefits loophole remained open.
US Justice Department spokesman Peter Carr said in an e-mailed statement that Social Security payments were never employed to persuade Nazi suspects to depart voluntarily.
The Social Security Administration refused the AP's request for the total number of Nazi suspects who received benefits and the dollar amounts of those payments. Spokesman William "BJ" Jarrett said the agency does not track data specific to Nazi cases.
Jarrett said there is no exception in US privacy law that "allows us to disclose information because the individual is a Nazi war criminal or an accused Nazi war criminal".
The words Arbeit Macht Frei (Work Sets You Free) are seen at the main entrance of the Sachsenhausen Nazi concentration camp in Oranienburg, Germany, on International Holocaust Remembrance Day. Provided By Associated Press |
A machine gun is positioned above the parade ground at the Sachsenhausen Nazi concentration camp in Oranienburg, Germany. The camp was used to house political prisoners. Provided By Associated Press |

(China Daily 10/21/2014 page10)