11903.fb2 ГУЛаг Палестины - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 207

ГУЛаг Палестины - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 207

General which, in turn, had received the information from a private citizen.

It was alleged that this individual may have been a doctor who experimented on

concentration camp prisoners. ... The interview established that the

complainant was not in a position to place the subject in a Nazi war camp nor

was she in possession of names of witnesses able to connect the subject with

wartime criminal activities. ... [T]he subject would have been only 15 to 20

years old during the war, hardly an age to have the position suggested above.

CASE NO. 122. This individual was brought to the attention of the Commission

by an anonymous note. The only allegation initially made was that the subject

was a war criminal and was living at a certain address in Canada. ... [T]he

evidence ... indicates the individual has lived all his life in Canada and was

drafted into the Canadian army for a short time in 1942.

CASE NO. 133. This individual was brought to the attention of the Commission

by the RCMP, whose source of information was Mr. Sol Littman. It was alleged

that the subject under investigation had been a member of the SS. ... These

investigations revealed that the subject was born in 1933 and would therefore

have been between 6 and 12 years of age during the war.

CASE NO. 156. This individual was brought to the attention of the Commission

by Mr. Sol Littman. Mr. Littman alleged only that the subject had been a

"propagandist for the party." When contacted by the Commission, Mr. Littman

indicated that he had no further evidence or information. ... On the basis of

the foregoing [itemized investigation], no evidence of participation in or

knowledge of specific war crimes is available.

CASE NO. 158. This individual was brought to the attention of the Commission

by a private citizen. The only allegation initially made was that the subject

was a war criminal because he was so wealthy and of German background. ...

The Commission was advised [by several German sources] that it had a record of

the subject which indicated his membership in the Luftwaffe (air force).

CASE NO. 171. This individual was brought to the attention of the Commission

by ... the Jewish Documentation Centre in Vienna. ... According to the year

of birth, this person would have been only five or six years old at the end of

World War II.

CASE NO. 179. This individual was brought to the attention of the Commission

by an anonymous letter. The allegation initially made was that the subject was

the owner of a shop who behaved curiously regarding the sources of the store's

goods. ... The subject is the spouse of the individual who is reported in

Case No. 180. Both were denounced in the same anonymous letter. ... The

Commission checked the shop itself and concluded that the complaint is entirely

spurious and unfounded.

CASE NO. 180. This individual was brought to the attention of the Commission

by an anonymous letter. The only allegation initially made was that the

subject was the owner of a shop who behaved curiously regarding the sources of

the store's goods. ... The Commission also checked the shop itself and

concluded that the complaint is entirely spurious and unfounded.

CASE NO. 190. This family's surname was brought to the attention of the

Commission by Mr. David Matas [chairman of the Jewish National Legal

Committee], whose source of information was an anonymous letter claiming the

family came from a foreign country and deserved investigation because they were

"recluses." There was no specific allegation of involvement in war crimes made

against this family.