de bene esse: literally, of well-being, morally acceptable but subject to future validation or exception
An undated image shows the main gate of the Nazi concentration camp
Auschwitz in Poland, which was liberated by the Russians, January 1945.
(AP Photo/File)
Germany's last-ditch effort to go after Nazi guards has reportedly taken
a big step forward. An investigation
based on a list of 50 former Auschwitz guards who were never prosecuted
found that at least 40 of them are still alive and living in
Germany—and they may now face justice. The investigators will send the
suspects' files to state prosecutors as soon as next month, AFP reports; it will then be up to the prosecutors to decide whether to press charges.
The head
of the special German prosecutors' office that carried out the
investigation says he will recommend charges against most of the former
guards, the AP reports. As we've reported before, John Demjanjuk's conviction in 2011 lowered the legal bar
needed to secure a conviction, opening the door for former guards at
concentration camps to be charged as an accessory to murder even without
direct evidence they took part in a specific murder. The investigations
are not completely finished; more details are expected next week.
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