
Justice Department Seeks To Strip Alleged Nazi Of Citizenship
The US Department of Justice Criminal
Division's Office of Special Investigations has petitioned a federal court to
strip an Illinois resident of his citizenship claiming the man is a former Nazi
concentration camp guard. Christopher A. Wray, Acting Assistant Attorney
General, made the announcement of the petition saying that Joseph Witte, a
Romanian native, served during World War II in the Waffen SS as a concentration
camp guard in Germany.
According to the Justice Department's complaint, Wittje was born in Romania,
entered the SS in July 1943 and served as an armed guard of prisoners in the SS
Death's Head Guard Battalian (Totenkopf-Wachbataillon) at the Sachsenhausen
Concentration Camp outside Berlin. He was assigned there until February 1945.
Thousands of camp inmates including political prisoners, Jews and other
civilians from across Europe died in the camp from starvation, disease, summary
execution (including hanging, shooting and gassing) and medical experimentation.
In February 1945, Wittje is said to have transferred to a combat unit and served
in that unit until the end of the war. In 1950, Wittje then allegedly obtained a
US visa in Austria after hiding his Nazi past. Serving as a concentration camp
guard would have made Wittje ineligible for a US visa. It would also have
prevented him from getting his citizenship in 1959.
OSI Director Eli M. Rosenbaum said, “The Department of Justice will not relent
in its efforts to identify Nazi persecutors such as Joseph Wittje and to ensure
through legal action that they be stripped of their illegally obtained U.S.
citizenship.”
Wittje would be the 71st such person to be stripped of their citizenship if the
Justice Department succeeds in its complaint. Stripping a person of their
citizenship is necessary before an individual can be deported.
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