
Friedrich Karl Berger (1959)
Posted on 02/23/2021 2:43:54 PM PST by ransomnote
Today a Tennessee resident with German citizenship was removed to Germany for participating in Nazi-sponsored acts of persecution while serving as an armed guard at a Nazi concentration camp in 1945.
In February 2020, Friedrich Karl Berger, 95, was ordered removed from the U.S. based on his participation in Nazi-sponsored persecution while serving in Nazi Germany in 1945 as an armed guard of concentration camp prisoners in the Neuengamme Concentration Camp system (Neuengamme).
“Berger’s removal demonstrates the Department of Justice’s and its law enforcement partners’ commitment to ensuring that the United States is not a safe haven for those who have participated in Nazi crimes against humanity and other human rights abuses,” said Acting Attorney General Monty Wilkinson. “The Department marshaled evidence that our Human Rights and Special Prosecutions Section found in archives here and in Europe, including records of the historic trial at Nuremberg of the most notorious former leaders of the defeated Nazi regime. In this year in which we mark the 75th anniversary of the Nuremberg convictions, this case shows that the passage even of many decades will not deter the Department from pursuing justice on behalf of the victims of Nazi crimes.”
“We are committed to ensuring the United States will not serve as a safe haven for human rights violators and war criminals,” said Acting ICE Director Tae Johnson. “We will never cease to pursue those who persecute others. This case exemplifies the steadfast dedication of both ICE and the Department of Justice to pursue justice and to hunt relentlessly for those who participated in one of history’s greatest atrocities, no matter how long it takes.”

Friedrich Karl Berger (1959)
In November 2020, the Board of Immigration Appeals upheld a Memphis, Tennessee, Immigration Judge’s Feb. 28, 2020, decision that Berger was removable under the 1978 Holtzman Amendment to the Immigration and Nationality Act because his “willing service as an armed guard of prisoners at a concentration camp where persecution took place” constituted assistance in Nazi-sponsored persecution. The court found that Berger served at a Neuengamme sub-camp near Meppen, Germany, and that the prisoners there included “Jews, Poles, Russians, Danes, Dutch, Latvians, French, Italians, and political opponents” of the Nazis. The largest groups of prisoners were Russian, Dutch and Polish civilians.
After a two-day trial in February 2020, the presiding judge issued an opinion finding that Meppen prisoners were held during the winter of 1945 in “atrocious” conditions and were exploited for outdoor forced labor, working “to the point of exhaustion and death.” The court further found, and Berger admitted, that he guarded prisoners to prevent them from escaping during their dawn-to-dusk workday, on their way to worksites and on their way back to the SS-run subcamp in the evening.
At the end of March 1945, as allied British and Canadian forces advanced, the Nazis abandoned Meppen. The court found that Berger helped guard the prisoners during their forcible evacuation to the Neuengamme main camp – a nearly two-week trip under inhumane conditions, which claimed the lives of some 70 prisoners. The decision also cited Berger’s admission that he never requested a transfer from concentration camp guard service and that he continues to receive a pension from Germany based on his employment in Germany, “including his wartime service.”
In 1946, British occupation authorities in Germany charged SS Obersturmführer Hans Griem, who had headed the Meppen sub-camps, and other Meppen personnel with war crimes for “ill-treatment and murder of Allied nationals.” Although Griem escaped before trial, the British court tried and convicted other defendants of war crimes in 1947.
The trial and appeal of the removal case were handled by Eli Rosenbaum, Director of Human Rights Enforcement and Policy in the Criminal Division’s Human Rights and Special Prosecutions Section (HRSP), HRSP Senior Trial Attorney Susan Masling, and attorneys from ICE New Orleans, Office of the Principal Legal Advisor (Memphis), with assistance from HRSP Chief Historian Jeffrey S. Richter. Daniel I. Smulow, Senior Counsel for National Security in the Justice Department Civil Division’s Office of Immigration Litigation has participated in the litigation of Berger’s appeal.
The investigation was initiated by the HRSP and was conducted in partnership with the Nashville HSI office.
Acting Attorney General Monty Wilkinson expressed gratitude for assistance provided by the FBI, our German colleagues, and by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Since the 1979 inception of the Justice Department’s program to detect, investigate, and remove Nazi persecutors, it has won cases against 109 individuals. Over the past 30 years, the Justice Department has won more cases against persons who participated in Nazi persecution than have the law enforcement authorities of all the other countries in the world combined. HRSP’s case against Berger was part of its ongoing efforts to identify, investigate and prosecute individuals who engaged in genocide, torture, war crimes, recruitment or use of child soldiers, female genital mutilation, and other serious human rights violations. HRSP attorneys prosecuted the first torture case brought in the United States and have successfully prosecuted criminal cases against perpetrators of human rights violations committed in Guatemala, Ethiopia, Liberia, Cuba, and the former Yugoslavia, among others.
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 HSI’s Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Unit, ICE’s Human Rights Law Division, 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.
To learn more about HRSP, visit https://www.justice.gov/criminal-hrsp.
And Soros the nazi walks free.
My point is it’s difficult to get any measure of justice from a 95 year old man for a crime 75 years ago. The punishment of an early departure to hell seems to not have much value as he’s already lived a full life.
Hell, he lived 25 years longer than my WW2 vet father did. You can take the last couple of years from him... makes a nice pair of antlers for the wall, but it’s not justice.
From my town, Oak Ridge, TN
I'm of the opnion that the justice department recent behavior is pretty much an indication that they just may be something like Nazis themselves...
“willing service as an armed guard of prisoners” ........................ or else you can serve better on the eastern front and die. Zo,vich vould you like? You really do not have choice. (Think now as if it was you, what would you choose, duty at home or in the meat grinder?) A 19 yr. old during those days had to do what he was ordered or else. Any of us would chose survival at any cost if we were there at that age.
Former concentration camp guard, 95, removed from Tennessee, sent back to Germany
My question is how he was not subject to justice 75 years ago. Or any time in the interim?
How did he get to the U.S.?
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It's puzzling that some only accept best-case speculation and defenses of this man. I can say we don't have all the details, but I don't assume and assert that he's being mistreated for being held accountable. His attorney probably didn't put forth the argument you have because it's not mentioned in friendly(ier) articles about this issue.
"Berger had claimed he was ordered to work at the camp, but the judge said he never sought a transfer and continues to receive a pension from Germany for his wartime service."
Friedrich Karl Berger, Nazi guard, loses deportation appeal - Washington Times
My Cousin was in Chu Lai in late 68-69, he was not with Lt Calley though.
My Father was attached to the Australian troops in WW2. He told me that the Aussies commonly cut ears off of Japanese they killed and hung them from a necklace they made. They were not in a particularly good mood, it was payback for atrocities from P.I. to the Southern Islands.
There is no such thing as “rules of war”. That is just a way to assuage guilt for those who send troops, but who do not get “muddy boots”.
Saint Paul a/k/a Saul of Tarsus before his conversion persecuted and terrorized Christians, and sought and received permission from authorities to go as far as Damascus in pursuit of any he could find. At one point he also assisted the mob that stoned Stephen to death, standing by holding their garments while they did the dirty work.
Saint Paul a/k/a Saul of Tarsus before his conversion persecuted and terrorized Christians, and sought and received permission from authorities to go as far as Damascus in pursuit of any he could find. At one point he also assisted the mob that stoned Stephen to death, standing by holding their garments while they did the dirty work.
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Sadly the German concentration camp guard did not experience a conversion, never asked for a transfer, and instead lived off the pension he earned at camps that were part of the Auschwitz system.
It would make sense to deport an 95 year old ex Nazi if the government also deports illegal gang members, otherwise it’s just posturing.
It would make sense to deport an 95 year old ex Nazi if the government also deports illegal gang members, otherwise it’s just posturing.
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That doesn’t make sense to me. I’m glad every time any of them leave.
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