Caledonia
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Caledonia man deported to Austria for Nazi crimes A former Nazi concentration camp guard who lived in Caledonia and was stripped of his U.S. citizenship after his participation in Nazi acts of persecution was uncovered has been deported to Austria, U.S. officials announced Thursday. The deportation of Josias Kumpf, 83, who served as an armed guard at a concentration camp in Germany and a labor camp in Poland, was announced by Rita M. Glavin, acting assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division of the Justice Department and John P. Torres, acting assistant secretary of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. "Josias Kumpf, by his own admission, stood guard with orders to shoot any surviving prisoners who attempted to escape an SS massacre that left thousands of Jews dead," said Glavin. Kumpf was born in Serbia and during the Justice Department’s investigation, admitted that he participated in the murderous November 1943 Nazi operation known as Operation Harvest Festival in which approximately 42,000 Jewish men, women and children at three camps in eastern Poland were murdered within two days. He emigrated to the U.S. from Austria in 1956 and became a U.S. citizen in 1964. In 2003 following an investigation by the U.S., Kumpf’s citizenship was revoked for violating a law that says those who have persecuted others are not allowed to enter the United States and for obtaining his citizenship under false pretenses. For most of his 52 years here, Kumpf lived in Chicago, (Obama Town ) where he worked in a sausage plant. After his wife died in 2002, he moved to Caledonia where his daughter lives. She has said her father suffers from Parkinson’s disease. »Read Full Article
yes you can arrest the Pope, or the Queen for such acts, any thing less damages the reputation of the church



