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Nazi accomplice loses US deportation appeal

September 21, 2011 09:18

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

A US judge has upheld a deportation order for a man described as an "indispensable" part of the Nazi campaign in the Ukraine.

John Kalymon was found to have voluntarily served in the Nazi-sponsored Ukrainian Auxiliary Police for three years during the Holocaust.

He moved to the US four years after the war ended, gained US citizenship and settled in Michigan, where he worked in a Chrysler factory. In 2007 he was stripped of his citizenship for concealing his wartime collaboration and last January a judge ordered that the 90-year-old should be deported.

The US Justice Department said Kalymon "personally shot Jews" and took part in "lethal acts of Nazi-sponsored persecution" and "violent anti-Jewish operations in which Jews were forcibly deported to be murdered in gas chambers and to serve as slave labourers".

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