The Devil Next Door (2019) s01e05 Episode Script

The Final Twist

1
From Israel tonight,
we report on a battle in the courts
which is sure to arouse
American interest.
It is several years now
since a man named John Demjanjuk
was forced to leave the United States
so as to be put on trial in Israel
after he was identified as a man
commonly called Ivan the Terrible.
Ivan the Terrible was responsible
for mass murder during World War II.
While Demjanjuk waits to be executed,
there is new evidence to suggest
that Israel may have the wrong man.
He's either Ivan the Terrible,
or it was all a terrible mistake.
I am innocent man.
That's a bullshit bum theory.
Now, the new evidence
from the recently opened files
of the Soviet KGB raises serious doubts
about Demjanjuk's guilt.
Today, Israel's Supreme Court
was given evidence
that strongly suggests Demjanjuk
was not Ivan the Terrible after all.
The files include
21 testimonies taken from guards
who served at Treblinka,
called Wachmanns.
The Wachmanns were interrogated
by the KGB,
then shot dead for treason.
Yet, their signed testimonies identify
Ivan the Terrible not as Demjanjuk,
but as a man
by the name of Ivan Marchenko.
Oh! Here it is.
Here it is. Now, this is a very,
very interesting photograph.
Um, it's in a statement
of this Wachmann from Treblinka.
And he says that in this photograph,
you see myself
and Ivan Marchenko,
the operator of the gas chambers
in Treblinka.
And sometimes, one photograph
is more powerful
than thousands of words.
When we got the entire material
about Ivan Marchenko,
we had 80 altogether,
Treblinka Wachmanns,
which all characterized
the eyes of Ivan the Terrible
as dark brown, and so does his ID card.
"Dunkelbraun."
Now, the eyes of Demjanjuk
are light blue to gray.
Light blue to gray.
These were not the eyes
of Ivan the Terrible.
They were among the most
dramatic courtroom confrontations
in history.
Look at me.
I saw his eyes.
I saw those murderous eyes.
I saw that face of his.
The eyes Eliahu Rosenberg
was looking at were light blue,
sitting under hair once dirty blond,
perched over unmarked cheeks
and thin lips.
But a photograph
and testimony
by former Treblinka guards
that accompanied it
seemed to describe a different man.
When you take the
photo of Ivan Marchenko
and you take the photo of Demjanjuk,
you can't make a mistake
between these two people.
They are so different.
Demjanjuk is round, has blue eyes.
Marchenko is dark with dark eyes.
He even had a scar on his, uh, cheek.
You can't make a mistake.
I see Ivan here, in front of me,
as I remember him,
as he lives in my mind.
There he is, as he stands here!
There is no chance of misidentification.
They knew him.
They simply knew him.
Ivan Demjanjuk, as claimed
by the Holocaust survivors in Jerusalem?
Or Ivan Marchenko,
as claimed by guards in Russia?
And will the new evidence from Russia
secure Demjanjuk's release
on reasonable doubt?
What do you want from me? Shall I dance?
I was definitely eager to prove
that everyone,
including five
legal establishment,
which were busy
for, uh, decades
in lies and deception
all of them are wrong,
and me alone is right all of the way.
All of the way,
in everything that was disputed.
I was right, and they were wrong.
Soviet documents.
He was forever screaming
that Soviet documents are fraudulent,
and yet,
the first opportunity that he gets,
he waves Soviet testimony of Wachmann
and says, "This is the truth:
Marchenko was the guard."
When you enter into all the testimonies
of the Wachmanns from Treblinka
about Marchenko the operator,
you have everything.
You have tall, you have short,
you have fat, you have thin.
You have black hair.
You have descriptions
that correspond to Demjanjuk.
I mean, you have a lot of it.
These were Wachmann
who were questioned
and then summarily killed.
The weight that is to be given
to those testimonies
is very little.
But the big surprise, of course,
is the following:
After the war, when Demjanjuk
wanted to enter the United States,
he declared that he's Ivan,
the son of Nikolai Demjanjuk
and of Olga
née, born Marchenko.
Now, this is too much of a coincidence.
Demjanjuk had used
the name Marchenko before,
because it was his mother's maiden name.
We all know that there are people
who use the mother's maiden name
as a way of sort of hiding
their true identity
because it's close enough
and yet far enough.
It is even more complicated,
because the defense
rushed to the Ukraine
and brought from there proof
that the maiden name of his mother
was not at all Marchenko,
but another name.
That, again, looked very suspicious.
It's like, how does that
How does he just coincidentally list
the guard of the gas chamber
as his mother's maiden name?
Doesn't that seem to offer
powerful corroborating evidence
of the fact that he
was Ivan the Terrible?
This is, of course, something
we raised in the Supreme Court.
It is a very strong incriminating aspect
of the whole
uh assemblage of evidence.
The decision on what to do
with him will be made
by the Supreme Court.
Their verdict's due shortly.
It will be very difficult for them
because if they decide
that this is not Ivan the Terrible,
then they really have to look into
the eyes of the Holocaust survivors,
the eyewitnesses,
and tell them,
"Your testimony is not good enough."
The appeal court judges may well decide
that John Demjanjuk
is not Ivan the Terrible.
That will be a desperately
painful verdict
for many people in Israel to accept
because this has been so much more
than a trial of one man's guilt.
This has been a hearing of history.
The appellant
John Ivan Demjanjuk
was extradited over seven years ago
from the United States to Israel.
Evidence was presented to prove
the appellant was a Wachmann
of the Trawniki unit,
which was established
to teach its members
how to eradicate, kill, exterminate,
and bring about the final solution
to the "Jewish problem."
Evidence also showed
that he was stationed at Sobibor,
one of three death camps
in addition to serving as an SS guard
in the concentration camps
at Flossenburg and Regensburg.
Several survivors of
the Treblinka inferno
identified the appellant
as Ivan the Terrible,
chief among the murderers and abusers
of Jews who were led to Treblinka
to be choked in the gas chambers.
For these crimes
he was convicted by the district court.
Following the appeal,
this court received
several testimonies
by different Wachmanns
which pointed to another man
as being Ivan the Terrible of Treblinka.
And they served to insert doubt
into our judicial deliberations
that perhaps the appellant
was not Ivan the Terrible of Treblinka.
Our verdict is unanimous.
We find the Wachmann Ivan Demjanjuk
innocent
on the grounds of reasonable doubt,
of the horrific charges attributed
to Ivan the Terrible of Treblinka.
Over and not done with.
Perfection is not the purview
of any human judge.
Issued today, July 29, 1993.
Today, five Israeli judges ruled
that while John Demjanjuk
very likely did serve as a guard
at a camp devoted to exterminating Jews,
he was not the infamous guard known
to his victims as Ivan the Terrible,
and for technical reasons,
would not be tried by Israel
for any other war crimes.
Survivors who identified
Demjanjuk believe strongly
the court is wrong.
Their eyewitness testimony
originally convinced the court,
which gave Demjanjuk the death penalty.
Then, the Supreme Court
overruled that verdict,
in effect saying the
survivors were wrong.
How can you release a vicious killer?
When the court ruled
he was a murderer at Sobibor?
This is a trial in the State of Israel?
We should perform a Keriah.
We should be sitting Shiva.
Demjanjuk is a murderer
and he should get what he deserves.
I do not accept it!
He's a murderer and he killed.
We paid with six million Jews!
We mustn't forget!
How could you,
in Jerusalem, sitting in a court of law,
say that the survivors' testimony
is less than
beyond a reasonable doubt?
To say to that survivor,
"The man you saw outside
of the gas chamber"
for months on end,
killing your family
We don't believe you.
"We just don't believe you
that that's him."
How could that happen?
I believe it all was a sham
and the judges know
that I recognized him
as Ivan the Terrible, for sure.
Other camp survivors
simply could not believe the verdict.
Some emerged speechless from the court.
We have no right
not to believe these people
over the testimonies of dead Ukrainians
who were put on trial for participating
in the death camps.
Who elevates these guards,
all who participated
in the killing machine,
to be greater than the survivors?
I'm shocked.
Complete shock.
The judges are wrong.
They committed an injustice
to the million dead.
He is a Nazi archcriminal.
A million Jews stand behind me.
When they ask me:
Yosef Cherney, what did you do?
What will I tell them?
I did what I could in
the state of Israel.
That's all I could do.
Of course it's hard emotionally.
I fully believe
he was that terrible murderer
who pushed the Jews
into the gas chambers at knifepoint.
I had no doubts. I still don't.
In my heart, there's no doubt
that he was identified correctly.
Demjanjuk was at Treblinka as well.
He worked there
and committed his horrific crimes there.
It's a wound that will never heal.
As for me, I feel sorrow.
I didn't speak to Epstein,
I didn't speak to Rosenberg,
or the other survivors.
It was very tough for them.
And I didn't
I think that I didn't want
to make it even worse.
For me, it is very difficult
that if we go into trial
and if we strive for justice,
our expectation is
that the same will go for the courts.
There is, here in Israel,
a war criminal
who did crimes against humanity
and against the Jewish people,
and you let him go
with arguments that,
in my opinion, do not hold water.
I'll tell you the very truth.
On the whole,
I enjoyed every second of it.
On Friday, as the Demjanjuk acquittal
sent the world media into a frenzy,
Yoram Sheftel was seen relaxing
in a corner of the hotel dining room,
biting into his buttered bread
and listening to John Demjanjuk Jr.'s
report on recent headlines.
Yoram Sheftel,
how much did you make on this trial?
I'm afraid I only reveal
the exact sum on my tax reports,
but I will tell you
and the viewers that it is
a six-figure sum in greens.
The lawyer who defeated
this potential miscarriage of justice
has written the book.
It's called The Demjanjuk Affair:
The Rise and Fall of a Show Trial.
This is the title of a book
by attorney Yoram Sheftel.
Which I should mention is a best seller
barely a week after its publication.
See, here's an example
of the transformation.
- Well?
- I'm approached by people I don't know
- We heard he was here.
- They heard I was here
- and wanted to congratulate me.
- Congratulations.
- That these people are shaking his hand?
- Yes.
- I don't believe my eyes.
- Neither do I.
But I think it's
because it's television.
Yes, people go after cheap celebrity.
At the day that
Demjanjuk was exonerated,
my mother admitted, uh,
the first time in her life,
definitely during my lifetime,
that she was wrong, and I was right.
And I never heard such
a sentence from her
in my entire life.
Yoram Sheftel shows his mother
what he achieved.
My decision to join
the case of Demjanjuk
was the most important, clever,
and rightful decision
I ever made in my life.
And all my life,
I would be proud of that decision
and of my conduct in this case.
John Demjanjuk,
the man cleared of being
the concentration camp guard
Ivan the Terrible,
has arrived back in America
after a flight from Israel.
Mr. Demjanjuk was still in handcuffs
when he was taken from prison
and put on board a flight to New York.
I believe it was very hard for him,
but he just remained thankful
throughout the whole period of time
that I got involved.
I'm glad Mr. D's name was cleared,
and he deserves some peace.
John Demjanjuk is home,
and this ruling sure looks like
he can count on staying home.
I'm very happy he is acquitted.
I grew up as a child with him,
and I know he could never have done
anything that they said he did.
- Ah
- Never. No one would ever
The whole time, whole 17 years,
no one would ever convince me
that he was Ivan the Terrible
or did anything bad.
Good thing he's free.
Don't you think that still,
you know, the, uh
crimes that maybe he committed
in Sobibor should be
Sobibor, who know?
Who know? That so many year passing.
- Yeah.
- And I don't believe that he was there.
Same thing, like Treblinka.
Because that's Ukraine.
I don't know why they
are against Ukraine.
The most significant first memory
of him is the day he came home.
Everybody in the family was excited
and talking.
I didn't get a chance to really talk
to him that much that day.
But I just remember sitting there
and kind of looking over at him
and thinking, "Huh.
This is, you know, the guy that"
I've, uh, you know,
got to know through through the TV."
John Demjanjuk came
back to Cleveland to live a quiet life.
We didn't see him much.
He would go to church,
to the Ukrainian Church.
Few people said they saw him go
to the supermarket,
the grocery store.
You'd see him around the parks
uh, presumably with his grandkids.
But he stayed out of the limelight,
but seemed to return
to a quiet life, finally.
Which wasn't to be.
There is some doubt
on whether Demjanjuk
was Ivan the Terrible.
But there is no doubt
he was a guard taking part
in the mass murder process
at the Sobibor death camp.
To allow such a person
to go unprosecuted
would be to say, in effect, that
the crimes don't matter,
they're not important.
I became Acting Director of OSI
the year after Demjanjuk came back.
And then, suddenly,
I inherited this case.
The judge told us,
"If you have sufficient evidence,"
you can come back to court
"and ask me to cancel his citizenship."
Clearly, the documents established
that Demjanjuk took part
in the mass annihilation process.
There is no question.
Absolutely no question
that the Trawniki card is authentic.
Demjanjuk was a specialist
in the annihilation of Jews.
We know that because he served
at a series of Nazi camps,
starting
with the Trawniki forced labor camp,
Then, he served
at the Sobibor extermination camp.
He also served, possibly, at Treblinka.
He served later
at the Flossenburg concentration camp.
Also at the Majdanek concentration camp.
And there is direct evidence
that John Demjanjuk beat Jews
on the way to the gas chambers.
The United States had a moral obligation
to the survivors
to see that he was brought to justice.
We didn't have criminal jurisdiction
under American law
because the Nazi crimes
didn't occur here.
Germany, of course,
was the logical destination.
Federal immigration agents went in,
and they picked him up in a wheelchair.
They took him out.
He just looked so bad.
People were stunned that the government
continued to go after geriatric men
for what they did years earlier.
What kind of a threat did you see
on that old man?
What harm to society did he pose
to anybody?
I was talking to a federal prosecutor.
And I said,
"The Holocaust was 50 years ago.
When will the government
ultimately stop?"
He looked me right in the eye
and he said,
"When these men take
their last dying breaths."
Demjanjuk's lawyers rushed to court
claiming that putting a man
in this terrible medical condition
on a plane
to Germany would amount to torture.
Right this very moment,
there's a motion before the
Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Uh, it is a CAT claim,
which means Convention Against Torture,
and a stay on his deportation.
If that's the case,
you'll all be back here
when they bring him back today.
The Court of Appeals issued an order
temporarily barring us
from removing Demjanjuk.
Of course, Demjanjuk's lawyers were saying
he was in such terrible medical shape.
It was all faked.
We had surveillance video shot
just before Demjanjuk
had been taken out,
showing him walking around,
going to an appointment,
getting out of a car,
opening the door,
getting back into the car.
It was a ruse.
Once we made it public,
immediately the Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals lifted the order.
I remember watching a live video feed
of that plane taking off,
and I remember saying to my deputy,
"Everything that could go wrong
has gone wrong. And so"
there's going to be some reason
for it to come back.
"I just feel it."
Within hours,
an official of the US Consulate there
sent me an e-mail.
And if you remember the first words
when the United States
landed on the moon:
"Houston, the Eagle has landed."
The title of the e-mail was
"The Albatross Has Landed."
I appreciated that.
The plaza was filled
with TV vans and reporters
and people lining up, waiting to get in.
They had to turn thousands away.
When the door opened,
everybody in the courtroom went
He looked dead.
His eyes were closed.
His hands were crossed on his chest
like he was in a coffin.
Photographers went crazy,
took him at all different angles.
He never blinked.
They read the charges against him.
He never blinked.
Once in a while, during the trial,
he may twitch a little bit.
And most people concluded
he was playing the sympathy card.
He was playing a game.
He was a good actor.
He had 30 years of experience.
Demjanjuk
played the part.
And he was prepared to stay the course
to the end.
If he'd have gone
to the gallows, he'd have said no.
There would have been
no deathbed confession.
I guarantee it.
This was the final act.
The trial in Israel was filled
with so much pain.
Some members of the prosecution team
never recovered.
But in my opinion,
it was ordained that he should
be released from Jerusalem
so that he would show up
in Munich, Germany,
where Hitler stood
and delivered his speeches.
And here, John Ivan Demjanjuk,
the man who pushed
and shoved Jewish men
and women and children
into the gas chambers,
who participated in one of the biggest
killing machines humanity has ever seen,
60 years later,
be convicted as being a participant
to the murder of millions of Jews.
A court in Germany, this morning,
convicted former US citizen
and accused Nazi death camp guard,
John Demjanjuk.
A judge in Munich, Germany,
handed down the sentence
to the 91-year-old
former Ohio autoworker today.
Demjanjuk, who is now 91 years old,
was charged with more than 28,000
counts of accessory to murder.
It's taken more than 30 years
to convict John Demjanjuk,
a cog in the Nazi war machine.
In the 1980s,
the Israeli Supreme Court ruled
that it was a case of mistaken identity.
This time,
the judge was in no such doubt.
Am I prepared to say
that they were right?
I wasn't in the trial.
I accept the justice system
in Germany, okay?
All right?
In this case, that's all I can say.
The Demjanjuk trial, or trials,
are the last great trial
of any Nazi war criminal.
The victims are dying out,
and so are the murderers.
Some were caught over the years,
others escaped.
Some walk freely even today.
There is no revenge,
there is no perfect justice,
but a partial justice, a late trial,
are better than injustice
or no trial at all.
There is a clear-cut proof
that the German Court didn't believe
for a second
the truth of his guilty sentence.
How do I know it?
What the judge does,
from his own initiative,
he asked the defense lawyer,
"Are you going to appeal?"
Defense lawyer says, "Yes,"
so he released Demjanjuk.
So And he was released
to be a free man, on the spot,
when they found him guilty
of murdering 29,000 Jews.
It's a joke. It's a joke.
People didn't appreciate
how important this trial was.
That, you know, you could say,
"Ah, they convicted a 91-year-old."
They sentenced him
to five years in prison.
"Big deal."
It was a big deal.
It was not a crime to aid and abet.
To be a part of the
Nazi killing machine.
It was not a crime.
John Demjanjuk had set a precedent.
These foot soldiers
are critical, critical instruments
for genocide's
implementation and success.
Without these foot soldiers of genocide,
you don't have the Holocaust.
Any type of assistance to the machinery
was a participant to the murder
and Final Solution of the Jews.
It took us 60 years and more
to be able to say that.
Well, as a line leader, I interacted
with John 300 times probably.
Because I had to think about this, what
could I possibly tell you about John?
So I'm not gonna tell you anything
about John.
I'm going to tell you
about the people that came
to work at Ford.
From Germany, the Ukraine,
all the people that, either trying
to get out during the war,
or they emigrated right after the war.
They were all the same.
They went to work.
They did their job.
Hardly ever talked.
And then they disappeared
into the darkness.
If you were in maintenance,
they had these huge
areas in the corners.
And they sat in those areas
by their toolboxes,
and they waited for the whistle to blow.
At that point,
they came out of the shadows,
work on the line,
then they would go back.
They were truly invisible people.
If you pick that story up
and equated it to John,
you'd say John was hiding.
The truth was,
that was all of them.
The US fought the Nazis in World War II.
We defeated Hitler in World War II.
How could Nazi war criminals wind up
in the United States?
When I was first elected to Congress
a man came to me
in my Washington office,
and he wasn't crazy on the outside,
but his allegation was crazy.
He said to me the government has a list
of Nazi war criminals living
in the United States.
I almost fell off my chair.
I said, "Okay, I want to see the files."
And I opened the first one.
"John Doe."
Murdered Jews in Latvia.
Immigration official went to visit
this man.
'Are you so-and-so?'
'Yes, I'm so-and-so.'
'How you feeling?'
'I feel fine.'
"'Thank you very much. Bye.'"
What? There must be some mistake here.
I must have missed something.
So I go to the next file.
Different country, different allegation,
same thing.
"Are you so and so?
How are you feeling?"
"I feel fine."
"Thank you very much. Bye."
I went through file after file,
and that's all they were asking.
"How do you feel?"
This is the immigration service.
This is not the public health service
of the US.
And I realized that
they had no intention
of ever doing anything
about these cases.
I'm sure
there's thousands of Nazis around.
Come on. They're here everywhere
in the United States.
Americans were well aware of the fact
that we grabbed a lot of the people
that were good for us,
that help us with programs
and all those other things.
And they weren't Nazis.
Because we needed 'em.
American industry
and US immigration law,
even American banks,
play the principal role
in harboring
and hiding Nazi collaborators.
The United States, in general,
couldn't care less.
The basic principle in the United States
was let sleeping Nazis lie.
They are some of the most
anti-communistic people you can find,
and therefore, they're an asset
because they will fight communism
in our country.
SS officers, Nazi scientists,
some of whom engaged in actually
torturous experimentation on people
They said they were anti-communist,
and that was the beginning and end
of the conversation.
Even if they knew that they had engaged
in persecution of thousands,
it didn't matter.
You know, there's a famous saying:
"The victors write history."
So you can go after John
because you thought
he was Ivan the Terrible,
and if he was Ivan the Terrible,
he should rot in hell.
But what I will tell you is
the father of all of NASA,
which is right up the street,
is Wernher von Braun.
He's a celebrated hero
here in this country.
You took a Nazi war criminal
and put him in charge
of our rocket program.
This guy invented the rockets
that were bombing England.
But he got us to the moon.
So, he was a "good Nazi."
It's all a matter of perspective,
isn't it?
We don't have a statute of limitations
in this country on murder.
And we also don't have
one on mass murder.
And you can't just say,
"Oh, I've been a good boy, a good girl."
I only killed 100 people, 1,000 people,
"but, you know, I'm a good person now."
Well, maybe you are,
but there are plenty people today
who want to commit mass murder.
And if we say, "Nazis can go free."
Fine, let's move on"
what's the message
to every would-be mass murderer today?
Well, you can get away with it.
Over the weekend, Demjanjuk died
in Germany at the age of 91.
He was convicted last year,
after being deported to Germany.
He died in a nursing home there
while awaiting the outcome of an appeal.
According to German law,
if a convicted felon dies
during his appeal proceedings,
his guilt is revoked,
and his final verdict remains unknown.
The problem is that
Demjanjuk passed away
between his conviction and his appeal,
and therefore,
according to the German law,
finally, when he passed away,
he passed away, again,
uh, under the presumption
that he's innocent.
So, the whole story
is an unfinished business
from any aspect that you look upon.
I know he wasn't a bad man,
and I know he wasn't Ivan the Terrible.
I know that he did
what he had to do to survive,
and that's good enough for me.
Do you ever speculate what he did?
There's no point, you know?
I'm a history buff.
I read up on, you know, Flossenbürg,
Majdanek, Auschwitz-Birkenau.
I mean, I like I said, I know, I did
so much history and research on all that,
so I can imagine what
he could have done,
but not just him,
everybody in that situation.
You, me, your friends, my friends.
If you were put in that situation,
and you were given the choice
between life and death,
I mean, what are you going to pick?
So, whatever he did
and wherever he was
is insignificant to me.
I was walking down the street
in Jerusalem several years ago,
and I saw a poster,
and it stated, "The prosecutor at Munich
speaks about the Demjanjuk trial."
And I sat there, and I listened
to the systematic explanations
that were made by the prosecutor
on why John Demjanjuk was convicted
in Munich by the Germans
of being at Sobibor.
And I approached him afterwards,
and I said,
"Do you believe the survivors
that he was in Treblinka?"
And he kind of shied away
from giving me an answer.
And then he looked at me,
and he said something.
"In Germany, we have our documents."
But this is the country of the Jews.
"Your survivors
are the people you believe."
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