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Fedorenko v. United States

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Fedorenko v. United States
Argued October 15, 1980
Decided January 21, 1981
Full case nameFeodor Fedorenko v. United States
Citations449 U.S. 490 (more)
101 S. Ct. 737; 66 L. Ed. 2d 686
Case history
PriorCertiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Holding
As a person who had assisted the enemy in persecuting civilians, Fedorenko's visa was illegally procured and therefore his citizenship must be revoked under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Warren E. Burger
Associate Justices
William J. Brennan Jr. · Potter Stewart
Byron White · Thurgood Marshall
Harry Blackmun · Lewis F. Powell Jr.
William Rehnquist · John P. Stevens
Case opinions
MajorityMarshall, joined by Brennan, Stewart, Powell, Rehnquist
ConcurrenceBurger
ConcurrenceBlackmun
DissentWhite
DissentStevens

Fedorenko v. United States, 449 U.S. 490 (1981), was a case decided by the Supreme Court of the United States revolving around the citizenship status of Feodor Fedorenko, a naturalized citizen who had hidden his past as a guard at a Nazi death camp. Fedorenko was a Ukrainian-born soldier who fought in World War II, was captured, and served as a guard at Treblinka extermination camp for over a year. In 1949, four years after the war ended he emigrated to the United States claiming refugee status under the Displaced Persons Act (DPA), which barred people who "assisted the enemy in persecuting civil populations". Fedorenko lied on his visa application to hide his time at Treblinka, and was admitted to the country. He lived a quiet life in the U.S., gaining citizenship in 1969, until the government initiated denaturalization proceedings against him in 1977. The District Court for the Southern District of Florida ruled against the government, but the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed that decision. The Supreme Court upheld the appeals court's judgment on modified reasoning, with Justice Thurgood Marshall writing for a 7–2 court. Justice Harry Blackmun and Chief Justice Warren E. Burger concurred, while Justices Byron White and John Paul Stevens dissented. As a result of Fedorenko's loss, he was deported to the Soviet Union and executed for treason and war crimes.

As a legal matter, Fedorenko concerned the issues of equity, materiality, and duress. Denaturalization proceedings are held in equity, and the district court ruled that as a matter of equitable discretion, it had the inherent authority to rule for Fedorenko owing to his positive life in the country. The appeals court and Supreme Court both disagreed, holding that once a determination is made that citizenship is unlawfully procured, a court must cancel that citizenship. As to the question of whether the citizenship was unlawfully procured, Fedorenko argued that the misrepresentations on his visa and citizenship applications were immaterial under the prevailing standard found in Chaunt v. United States (1951). The district court agreed over the objection of the government; the appeals court reversed that decision; and the Supreme Court vacated that reversal, sidestepping ambiguities in the Chaunt standard and the question of whether it applied to the case at hand. Instead, the Supreme Court determined that Fedorenko's citizenship was "illegally procured" as a matter of the plain language of the law. This was because the district court held that the government did not prove that Fedorenko committed any atrocities at Treblinka voluntarily, as opposed to under duress; the appeals court did not contest this holding; and the Supreme Court held that it did not matter, as it found exemption for duress in the relevant language in the DPA.

Fedorenko arose out of a growing public consciousness of Nazis living quietly across the United States; investigations into the matter began at public urging in the early '70s, but proved to be slow-going and ineffective. The government was wholly unprepared when it filed charges, owing to the Immigration and Naturalization Service's unfamiliarity with the court system. At Fedorenko's district court trial, the government called six survivors of Treblinka to testify; the first failed to identify Fedorenko at the defense table, instead pointing at an elderly man who was there spectating. The six survivors otherwise testified that they had witnessed Fedorenko carry out atrocities such as beating and shooting prisoners. The government also called two expert witnesses, both of whom testified that had officials known of Fedorenko's time at Treblinka when processing his application, he would have been denied entry and citizenship. Fedorenko brought three character witnesses in his own defense and testified on his own behalf, denying that he had committed any atrocities and claiming that he had not served voluntarily. After Fedorenko's loss at the Supreme Court, he was deported to the Soviet Union in 1984, pled guilty to war crimes in 1986, and executed in 1987.

The Supreme Court's ruling – that Fedorenko was ineligible as a matter of law owing to being a Treblinka guard in the first place – assisted government officials in future cases against suspected Nazi collaborators, but the Court earned criticism for its failure to clarify the Chaunt standard and its applicability and for not allowing duress as a defense. Some commentators thought that if duress was not an exception, the act would bar Jewish kapos or even those forced to cut prisoners' hair from entry, while others found that argument unconvincing. In concurrence, Harry Blackmun argued that the Court should have applied Chaunt to the instant case; in dissent, John Paul Stevens argued against the Court's interpretation of duress in the DPA; and also in dissent, Byron White argued that the Court should have clarified Chaunt and remanded the case back to the appeals court to review the district court's findings.

Background[edit]

Case[edit]

Feodor Fedorenko after his escape to the United States in 1949

The aftermath of World War II saw many attempts on the part of the United States and other Allied countries to address a large number of refugees and other displaced persons stemming from the war. In 1948, the United States government passed the Displaced Persons Act (DPA), which allowed the government to ignore its regular quotas when admitting refugees from the war.[1] However, the act referenced language from the constitution of the International Refugee Organization that excluded the following from being considered "displaced persons":

  1. War criminals, quislings, and traitors.
  2. Any other persons who can be shown:
    (a) to have assisted the enemy in persecuting civil populations of countries, Members of the United Nations; or
    (b) to have voluntarily assisted the enemy forces since the outbreak of the second world war in their operations against the United Nations.[2]

One person who came to the United States through the DPA was Feodor Fedorenko, a Ukrainian-born citizen of the Soviet Union. In June 1941, Nazi Germany invaded the country as a part of World War II, leading Fedorenko to be drafted into the Red Army. Within a month of being mobilized, he was captured by the Germans. After moving through several prisoner of war (PoW) camps,[3] Fedorenko was trained in early 1942 to be a guard, and was transferred to work at the Treblinka extermination camp in September 1942[4] until an uprising closed the camp in August 1943. He then served as a guard at a PoW camp in Pölitz, and then as a warehouse guard in Hamburg. Before the British entered Hamburg in 1945, Fedorenko left service of the Nazis and did civilian labor work until 1949.[5]

Fedorenko applied for admission to the U.S. through the DPA in 1949, falsely claiming that he was Polish and that he had spent the war working as a farmer there, and then as a factory worker in Pölitz. He claimed that he served in a "labor battalion"; the DPA would have required an investigation to determine whether or not he was a voluntary collaborator with the Nazis, but there is no evidence such an investigation occurred. After six weeks, Fedorenko's application was granted.[5] He lived a quiet life for the next 28 years, working in a factory in Connecticut before retiring to Miami Beach, Florida, in 1976. In 1969, he applied for citizenship, again not disclosing his time at the extermination camp; the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) recommended Fedorenko be naturalized, and in 1970, he was granted U.S. citizenship.[6] Throughout his time in the United States, his only legal infraction was a parking ticket.[7]

Meanwhile, public consciousness was growing aware of Nazis and collaborators living quietly in the United States, with high-profile cases such as Hermine Braunsteiner coming to light in the 1960s and '70s. Two U.S. Representatives, Joshua Eilberg and Elizabeth Holtzman, began calling attention to the issue in order to urge the government to root out domestic war criminals.[8] As early as 1964,[9] Fedorenko's name was on a list of 59 suspected war criminals compiled by Dr. Otto Karbach. In 1973, he gave the list to the INS;[a] this, as well as pressure from Eilberg and Holtzman, led the INS to create an "office" to investigate the charges. The office comprised of exactly one man, Sam Zutty, a career INS investigator.[11] He worked with Israeli police to find survivors who could identify the people in question; this led to mixed results. One 76-year-old survivor named Eugun Turkowski insisted that one a man in a spread of photographs was Fedorenko, when it was actually John Demjanjuk.[10] Zutty's office proved on the whole to be largely ineffective, filing no cases for the first three years the task force existed.[12] In response to a January 1977 letter from Holtzman's subcommittee, the Government Accountability Office found that while there was no conspiracy to protect Nazis from investigation, the INS had proved incompetent to investigate the allegations before it.[13]

Finally, looking to alleviate pressure, the government[b] brought denaturalization proceedings against Fedorenko and nine other suspected war criminals from late 1976 through 1977,[17] filing Fedorenko's in 1977.[5] The government, however, proved to be wholly unprepared for trial; it had located no domestic witnesses, had not prepared the witnesses it did have for trial, did not interview its elderly witnesses (instead hoping that they would survive long enough to take the stand in court), and was not familiar with court standards for photographic identification. Days before the commissioner of the INS was set to testify before Eilberg's subcommittee in July 1977, Zutty's office was dissolved and replaced with a special litigation unit.[17] The special litigation unit brought no new cases, but the government proceeded with five of these cases post-reorganization, and Fedorenko's case went to trial.[18]

Denaturalization[edit]

In Article I of the U.S. Constitution, the federal government is given the power "to establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization".[19] As a part of this power, Congress passed the Naturalization Act of 1906, which provided that a person could be denaturalized in cases of fraud or where the citizenship was "illegally procured".[20] The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of that act as a part of its ruling in Johannssen v. United States (1912). In 1952, Congress overwrote that statute with one providing for reversing citizenship obtained "by concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation", adding the illegal procurement language back in 1961.[21]

Materiality proved to be a controversial issue among courts, which could not agree as to what constituted a material fact. While the Supreme Court ruled in Johannssen that a fact that would have been disqualifying if disclosed should be considered material, less obvious cases provoked disagreement. Some courts thought that merely stymying an investigation that could have turned up more relevant evidence would be enough to revoke citizenship. Courts struggled with similar problems in deportation cases, developing other standards in that arena. Often, courts would lump various denaturalization criteria together or reference them vaguely.[22]

The Supreme Court attempted to clarify the standard of materiality in Chaunt v. United States (1960), providing for a two-pronged test where satisfying either would demonstrate materiality. The first prong affirmed the widely agreed-upon standard, while the second designated facts material where the "disclosure might have been useful in an investigation possibly leading to the discovery of other facts warranting denial of citizenship". This second prong seemingly struck a balance between prior approaches by lower courts; an investigation was necessary to satisfy it, but not sufficient.[23]

Chaunt failed to reduce the confusion and disarray of lower court decisions on the subject, even leading to a circuit split between the Ninth and Second Circuit Court of Appeals. In United States v. Rossi (1962) and La Madrid-Peraza v. INS (1974), the Ninth Circuit held that the second prong of Chaunt still required the government to show that the facts discovered on a potential investigation would have caused the denial of citizenship. Rossi was also one case that extended the definition of materiality to visa applications, not just citizenship cases, as courts did consistently at the time. The Second Circuit ruled differently in United States v. Oddo (1963), arguing that the second prong only required the government to show that a potential investigation could conceivably have turned up more relevant information.[24]

Equity[edit]

Rather than being suits in common law, civil denaturalization cases are decided in equity.[c] This holding dates back to the District Court for the Southern District of New York's ruling in Mansour v. United States (1908), denying the defendant's request for a jury. The court ruled that denaturalization cases are analogous to suits to cancel a government-given grant or patent, which are treated as suits in equity, and that denaturalization cases should be decided similarly.[26] The Supreme Court agreed with this reasoning in Luria v. United States (1913), although it did not cite Mansour. At the time Fedorenko was decided, Luria was not seriously challenged as settled precedent.[27] Despite the proceedings being designated as equitable, the Supreme Court has made past rulings that narrow the set of rights normally available to defendants in equitable proceedings. In some of its early decisions, the Supreme Court ordered denaturalization for minor errors such as not making sure that a certificate of lawful arrival was attached to the application for citizenship or not holding the final hearing in open court, holding that it was the responsibility of the applicant to meet all requirements for citizenship and that the law leaves no room for equitable discretion in that matter.[28]

However, the Court has also ruled that naturalized citizens enjoy all of the same rights and privileges as citizens by birth.[29] The courts' pattern of ordering denaturalization liberally changed somewhat in Schneiderman v. United States (1943), in which the Court ruled that it was the government's responsibility to provide "clear, unequivocal, and convincing" evidence in favor of denaturalization, a high bar that approached the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard of criminal law.[28][30]

Lower courts[edit]

District court[edit]

Trial[edit]

The government was represented by four lawyers, led by the chief assistant U.S. district attorney, John Sale. Fedorenko was represented by Gregg Pomeroy, a lawyer who had served in the local public defender's office but was in private practice by then. The presiding judge was Norman Charles Roettger Jr. of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.[7]

The government called six survivors of Treblinka to the witness stand, all of Israeli citizenship.[31] Their names were Eugun Turkowski, Shalom Kohn, Josef Czarny, Gustaw Boraks, Sonia Lewkowicz, and Pincas Epstein. All six, with the exception of Czarny, said that they had seen Fedorenko beat, whip, or shoot Jews during their time in Treblinka and recounted those stories; Kohn claimed that Fedorenko beat him personally. Czarny presented more circumstantial evidence, but admitted on cross-examination that he had not specifically seen Fedorenko commit the acts he was detailing. The witnesses variously claimed that they had seen or heard of Fedorenko shooting prisoners in and out of the Lazarett; carrying a pistol and/or a whip; beating Jews as they exited the train; chasing prisoners with the whip. In one provocative example, Pincas Epstein claimed that he had seen Fedorenko shoot a prisoner who was naked on his hands and knees next to the mass grave of the gas chambers, a man Epstein knew from his hometown. On cross-examination of Turkowski and Kohn, Gregg Pomeroy emphasized the involuntary nature of the work they had done at Treblinka, looking to bolster his own argument that Fedorenko had served under duress.[32]

Identification of Fedorenko was somewhat trickier: when asked to point to a man in the room, Turkowski incorrectly identified an elderly man in the spectators' section. The courtroom identification was not strictly necessary; Fedorenko's initial application had been admitted into evidence, and the witness correctly identified Fedorenko in the photograph in court. However, it did damage the government's case. Kohn correctly identified Fedorenko in the room; Czarny, Boraks, and Epstein had correctly identified an earlier picture of Fedorenko from a photo spread shown to him in Israel. [32]

The government called two expert witnesses to supplement its case as well. The first, was Kenmore Jenkins, a former Foreign Service officer who issued DPA visas as part of his work in Munich. While he was not personally familiar with Fedorenko, he was an expert as to the in-practice implementation of the DPA immediately following World War II. His most important role came when he testified that, whether voluntary or not, disclosing his service as a guard would have disqualified Fedorenko.[33] The second expert witness, and the final overall, was Harry Zimon, the government worker who handled Fedorenko's citizenship application. He also testified that had he known of Fedorenko's time at Treblinka, he would not have recommended his naturalization. On cross-examination, Zimon admitted that Fedorenko claimed to be Ukrainian on his citizenship application and Polish on his visa application, but did not investigate the discrepancy. After Zimon's testimony, the government rested its case and moved to request summary judgment. The motion was denied.[34]

Fedorenko's defense consisted of three character witnesses and his own testimony. All three of the witnesses testified in favor of Fedorenko's good moral character. One of those witnesses, Nadia Huczar, testified in addition that many Ukrainians in American or British territory feared deportation to the Soviet Union, which was thought to be easily fatal. Fedorenko's own testimony consisted mostly of distancing himself from the atrocities the government's witnesses said they saw him commit. He denied ever being given a whip, seeing anyone die in the Lazarett, going near the gas chambers, whipping or shooting anybody, or seeing a Jew being forced to undress upon arrival. He admitted to being given a pistol, and to shooting at escaping prisoners during the uprising, although he claimed to never have hit anyone. After the lawyers finished questioning Fedorenko, Roettger asked Fedorenko to look him in the eye and – in asking whether he committed any of the atrocities the witnesses claimed to have saw him commit – say da or nyet, to which Fedorenko looked him in the eye and responded "nyet". At this point, the judge announced that he did not need to hear the testimony of six Soviet guards the defense intended to call, a move the government correctly interpreted as favoring the prosecution.[35]

Ruling[edit]

The district court ruled for Fedorenko, rejecting the testimony of the Treblinka survivors and Jenkins. Roettger found the photographic spread to constitutionally invalid for identification, as the photograph containing Fedorenko was clearer and bigger than its neighbors, and the spread contained as few as three photos for some of the witnesses. The in-court identification was also ruled invalid, as the court speculated that the two witnesses who correctly pointed out Fedorenko may have been coached following Turkowski's gaffe. The court, therefore, found that the witnesses' testimony was mostly not credible, and the government had not satisfactorily proved that Fedorenko had willingly committed any atrocities that would disqualify him.[36]

On Jenkins' testimony and the question of materiality, the court rejected the government's argument for a broad interpretation of Chaunt, instead ruling that its second prong only applied where the investigation in question would have revealed disqualifying facts. Roediger reasoned, relying on the Ninth Circuit, that an investigation at the time would have found that Fedorenko was forced to work as a guard at Treblinka and would have admitted him.[37] Fedorenko might have been disqualified on the plain language of the DPA – the disqualifying clause, section 2(a), does not explicitly contain an exemption for duress, while section 2(b) does – but the court ruled that if the persecution clause did not have a duress exemption, it would be forced to deny entry to kapos, an unjust result that necessitated the existence of a voluntariness standard.[38] Finally, the court asserted that it had discretion as a court in equity to rule for Fedorenko, given his nearly three decades living in the United States with a near-spotless record in that time. Citing the evidence presented in support of Fedorenko's character, including being viewed positively by people around him, Roettger found that his power to make sure the case had a fair outcome – regardless of the law – extended to ruling to preserve his citizenship.[39]

Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals[edit]

Following the embarrassing performance in this case and others, the special litigation unit was reorganized into the Office of Special Investigations (OSI) under the Department of Justice, which greatly expanded its budget and capabilities.[40] Under OSI management,[16] The government appealed the district court's ruling to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, disputing the decision with respect to materiality, equitable discretion, and reliability of witness testimony. On June 28, 1979, writing for a three-judge panel, John Minor Wisdom reversed the district court's ruling on the first two grounds. The third was ignored, as the first two were deemed sufficient to reverse. With regards to materiality, the Fifth Circuit followed the Second Circuit's path in the split on Chaunt, ruling that since a disclosure might have caused the government to find facts worth denying citizenship, the misrepresentation was material. The court reasoned that following the Ninth Circuit would require the government to investigate and conclusively discover disqualifying facts, and then prove them against a high standard of evidence. Such a barrier would be too difficult for the government to meet, the court reasoned, and would instead incentivize applicants to misrepresent their cases.[41]

The appeals court also ruled that the district court erred in using equitable discretion to justify ruling for Fedorenko, holding that it had no discretion to apply to the instant case:

There is a crucial distinction between a district court's authority to grant citizenship and its authority to revoke citizenship. In the former situation, the court must consider facts and circumstances relevant to determining whether an individual meets such requirements for naturalization as good moral character and an understanding of the English language, basic American history, and civics. The district courts must be accorded some discretion to make these determinations. Once it has been determined that a person does not qualify for citizenship, however, the district court as no discretion to ignore the defect and grant citizenship. The denaturalization statute does not accord the district courts any authority to excuse the fraudulent procurement of citizenship.[42]

The appeals court ordered that Fedorenko's citizenship be revoked. The Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari to consider whether Fedorenko's citizenship was cancellable on statutory grounds, and whether equitable discretion could counteract that.[43] Benjamin Civiletti argued the government's case before the Court, his only oral argument delivered while serving as the Attorney General.[16]

Supreme Court[edit]

Thurgood Marshall wrote the opinion of the Court.

Writing for the majority on January 21, 1981,[44] Justice Thurgood Marshall affirmed the appeals court's judgment, but not its rationale.[45] The Court distinguished Chaunt from automatic application to this case, as that case concerned misrepresentations on a citizenship application about events occurring after the visa was granted. This case, on the other hand, concerned misrepresentations made on the visa application about events occurring prior to entry. The Court determined that it would be appropriate to decide whether the misrepresentation test created in Chaunt applied to visa applications, but then dismissed the question as pragmatically unnecessary by negating Fedorenko's procurement of his visa.[46]

In defining a new minimum standard of materiality for visa applications, the Court held that "at the very least, a misrepresentation must be considered material if disclosure of the true facts would have made the applicant ineligible for a visa." It then held that under the plain language of the act and Jenkins' testimony, Fedorenko was ineligible for his visa, rejecting the district court's interpretation of the voluntariness standards in the DPA. Because section 2(a) did not contain an exemption for duress, while section 2(b) did, the Court held that it did not have to consider duress in its construction of 2(a).[47] The Court ruled that Fedorenko's involvement under the act was enough to be disqualified under 2(a), whereas a Jewish inmate forced to cut the hair of other inmates in preparation for execution would not qualify. It deferred the question of kapos to a future case.[48] Despite the district court's finding that Fedorenko's service was not voluntary, he was ineligible for his visa at the time he applied, and thus his misrepresentation was material.[49]

From there, the Court concluded that Fedorenko's citizenship must be revoked as well; the DPA required that persons admitted under the act comply with all immigration laws in force. The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 provided that applicants for citizenship needed to have been approved for permanent residence, which is impossible without a valid visa. Since Fedorenko's visa was invalid, his citizenship was deemed "illegally procured" and thus revocable.[50] On the issue of equitable discretion, the Court affirmed the appeals court's decision, holding that while equity can be used to emphasize or deemphasize facts in a naturalization case, the district court judge had no power to use equity in determining the result of a denaturalization case.[51] Chief Justice Warren E. Burger concurred in the judgement, but did not file an opinion.[52]

Other opinions[edit]

Justice Harry Blackmun concurred, but held that majority should have applied Chaunt to the instant case because he felt that the facts used to distinguish Chaunt were immaterial. He reasoned that had it Chaunt been applied, its first prong would have had the same effect of disqualifying Fedorenko based on the testimony of Jenkins; the facts, if discovered, would have led to denial of a visa. He also noted that lower courts had been applying Chaunt consistently to visa applications. On the second prong of Chaunt, Blackmun defended the district court's view that the misrepresented facts would have to lead to the discovery of disqualifying truths to be material. He argued that if every misrepresentation was subject to scrutiny on the basis that it might have led to the discovery of disqualifying facts, then naturalized citizenship was made too vulnerable and easily revoked when it should be equal to that of a natural-born citizen.[53]

Justice John Paul Stevens dissented, writing that the Court acted on a "theory that no litigant argued, that the Government expressly disavowed".[54] Regarding the DPA, Stevens agreed with the district court's rejection of the voluntariness distinction between 2(a) and 2(b). He contended that despite 2(a) containing a duress exception and 2(b) not, 2(a) certainly had to incorporate a distinction of duress regardless; otherwise, it would disqualify Jewish kapos, a result he felt was unacceptable.[55] On the issue of Chaunt, he echoed the view that the government should have to prove that a misrepresentation stymied discovery of disqualifying facts to show materiality. He concluded that what he saw as the Court's error would cause "human suffering".[56]

Justice Byron White also dissented, arguing that rather than relying on the DPA, the Court should have clarified the Chaunt standard and remanded the case to the appeals court to review the district court's findings. He agreed with the majority's ambivalence on whether or not to apply Chaunt to visa applications,[57] but also noted that the appeals court failed to review the district court's use of Chaunt on Fedorenko's citizenship application.[58] White agreed with the appeals court's interpretation of Chaunt more than the district court's, but disagreed with the Supreme Court's interpretation of the DPA; he argued that a voluntariness standard might well be contained in the use of the words "assist" and "persecute" in the DPA, which would influence the outcome of the case.[59]

Aftermath[edit]

Following the Supreme Court's ruling, Fedorenko was subject to deportation proceedings. The Board of Immigration Appeals refused to make a duress exemption for him, and thus Fedorenko was ordered to leave the country. In December 1984, after being refused by Canada, Fedorenko was deported to the Soviet Union. In 1986, he pled guilty to all charges of treason and war crimes and was sentenced to death. On July 28, 1987, the Soviet Union announced that they had executed him.[60] The director of the Anti-Defamation League told The New York Times that "justice was delayed but finally served",[61] and Michael Bazyler and Frank Tuerkheimer wrote in their book that "the inescapable fundamental fact is that he played a part in a horrendous killing machine that probably murdered several hundred thousand persons on his watch."[62]

Fedorenko v. United States had several important effects on future trials. It established that suspected war criminals would not be able to escape the charges by claiming duress; when John Demjanjuk's trial began a month later, he claimed, unlike Fedorenko, that he had never worked at any Nazi concentration camp at all.[63] In addition, because the Supreme Court did not make a distinction between a concentration camp and a death camp in ruling against Fedorenko, future cases were made easier by establishing that working at a concentration camp was sufficient.[64] The Fedorenko case did also dampen future denaturalization efforts in that the witnesses who participated felt that they were denigrated by the district judge, which made them reluctant to participate in cases such as Demjanjuk's.[65]

Gerald A. Wunsch, writing in the Immigration and Nationality Law Review, criticized the appeals court's and Supreme Court's treatment of equitable discretion. He contended that their approaches essentially excised all equitable discretion from a proceeding that is nominally carried out in equity, and argued that the district court was correct to exercise discretion in its ruling. He also argued, however, that there are limits on equitable discretion that the district court ignored.[66]

Several scholars criticized the Court for sidestepping clarification of Chaunt. Abbe L. Dienstag called it a "neat trick of statutory interpretation" in the Columbia Law Review; Diane Goffer Bylciw wrote for the New York Law School Law Review that Fedorenko "may be remembered more for what it failed to decide than what it actually decided"; and Gerald A. Wunsch in the Immigration and Nationality Law Review and Bylciw both added that this decision left the circuit split in force. The Eastern District of Pennsylvania District Court noted the same failure in United States v. Osidach, choosing instead to resolve its case on the same "illegal procurement" test the Fedorenko court had, as did the court in United States v. Demjanjuk.[67] Jann M. Parker, writing in the Connecticut Law Review, suggested requiring the government to prove that a misrepresentation would have led to an investigation, but then requiring the applicant to prove that the investigation would not have found disqualifying facts.[68] Patricia A. Binder criticized the Court's refusal to extend Chaunt to visa applications, finding the reasoning unconvincing.[69]

Dienstag argued that the Court should not have dismissed Fedorenko's duress defense in their ruling.[70] He dismissed the statutory construction by which the Court moved the issue aside, arguing that such a construction was not the necessary consequence of the language and that other readings were possible.[71] He argued that the defense of duress should be allowed, but the burden of proof should be on the defendant.[70] Bazyler and Tuerkheimer also discussed duress, arguing that Fedorenko may have had good odds of escaping while on leave, thus rending his service voluntary.[62] On the broader subject, Bylciw wrote that while the question of kapos was practically becoming more moot over time, the theoretical question of interpretation still remained.[72] Lawrence Douglas wrote in a 2016 book that he disliked Roettger's and Stevens' analysis of the duress question, as he saw it as morally equating kapos with guards such as Fedorenko.[73]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Criminal war crimes charges were generally thought to be out of the question in the United States, as the legal consensus was that such a case would violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. Thus, the INS's prevailing strategy was to deport criminals to countries who would be willing to prosecute.[10]
  2. ^ Exactly who handled and initiated Fedorenko's prosecution in the district court is disputed. Some claim that it was initiated by Zutty's office and transferred to the special litigation unit;[14] others claim that the INS gave the case to the Department of Justice;[15] still others claim that the special litigation unit's involvement was limited at best, but that it still received most of the blame for the case's early results.[16]
  3. ^ The U.S. government can also seek denaturalization through an indictment in criminal court, under 18 U.S.C § 1425. See Maslenjak v. United States, 582 U.S. ___.[25]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Bylciw 1982, p. 951.
  2. ^ Dienstag 1982, pp. 124, fn. 16. Quoting IRO Constitution.
  3. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 251.
  4. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 252.
  5. ^ a b c Parker 1982, p. 411.
  6. ^ Rinaldi 1979, p. 299; Parker 1982, p. 411.
  7. ^ a b Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 253.
  8. ^ Douglas 2016, pp. 32–33; Ryan 1984, p. 51–52.
  9. ^ Rinaldi 1979, p. 299.
  10. ^ a b Douglas 2016, p. 37.
  11. ^ Ryan 1984, p. 52; Douglas 2016, pp. 33–34.
  12. ^ Ryan 1984, p. 55.
  13. ^ Douglas 2016, pp. 38–39.
  14. ^ Ryan 1984, p. 60.
  15. ^ Rinaldi 1979, p. 300.
  16. ^ a b c Douglas 2016, p. 49.
  17. ^ a b Ryan 1984, p. 59.
  18. ^ Ryan 1984, pp. 60–61.
  19. ^ Binder 1982, p. 134. Quoting U.S. Constitution, article I, section 8, clause 4.
  20. ^ Binder 1982, p. 134, explicitly refers to the act as the "Immigration and Nationality Act of 1906", but no act exists by that title and the language used by Binder matches the text of the Naturalization Act of 1906. Quoting Naturalization Act of 1906.
  21. ^ Binder 1982, pp. 134–135. Quoting Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952.
  22. ^ Binder 1982, pp. 135–136.
  23. ^ Binder 1982, p. 136–137. Quoting Chaunt v. United States, 364 U.S. at 355.
  24. ^ Binder 1982, p. 137; Parker 1982, pp. 415, 418.
  25. ^ Belsan, Gavoor & Marutollo 2018, p. 150.
  26. ^ Wunsch 1981–1982, pp. 363–364.
  27. ^ Wunsch 1981–1982, pp. 364–365.
  28. ^ a b Binder 1982, p. 135.
  29. ^ Wunsch 1981–1982, p. 363.
  30. ^ Wunsch 1981–1982, p. 366.
  31. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 254.
  32. ^ a b Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014. Turkowski on pp. 254–256; Kohn on pp. 256–257; Czarny on pp. 257–258; Boraks on pp. 258–259; Lewkowicz on p. 261; Epstein on pp. 261–262.
  33. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, pp. 259–260.
  34. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 262.
  35. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, pp. 263–265.
  36. ^ Parker 1982, pp. 413–414; Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 266.
  37. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, pp. 267–268; Parker 1982, pp. 416–419.
  38. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, pp. 267–268.
  39. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, pp. 268–269.
  40. ^ Ryan 1984, pp. 61–62.
  41. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  42. ^ Evans 1980, pp. 188–189. Quoting United States v. Fedorenko, 597 F.2d at 953–954.
  43. ^ Binder 1982, pp. 129, 132.
  44. ^ Wunsch 1981–1982, p. 360.
  45. ^ Bylciw 1982, p. 957.
  46. ^ Bylciw 1982, p. 958–960.
  47. ^ Tuggle 1981, p. 369; Bylciw 1982, p. 960. Quoting Fedorenko v. United States, 449 U.S. at 509.
  48. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 270.
  49. ^ Tuggle 1981, p. 369; Bylciw 1982, p. 960.
  50. ^ Binder 1982, p. 134.
  51. ^ Bylciw 1982, pp. 961–962.
  52. ^ Parker 1982, p. fn. 4.
  53. ^ Parker 1982, p. 420–421.
  54. ^ Parker 1982, p. 422.
  55. ^ Bylciw 1982, p. 965.
  56. ^ Bylciw 1982, p. 966.
  57. ^ Bylciw 1982, pp. 963–964.
  58. ^ Tuggle 1981, p. 370.
  59. ^ Parker 1982, pp. 421–422; Bylciw 1982, pp. 963–964, fn. 96; Tuggle 1981, p. 370.
  60. ^ Schmemann 1986; Barringer 1987; Getschman 1988, pp. 310–311.
  61. ^ Barringer 1987.
  62. ^ a b Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 273.
  63. ^ Douglas 2016, p. 55.
  64. ^ Douglas 2016, pp. 48–49.
  65. ^ Douglas 2016, p. 47.
  66. ^ Wunsch 1981–1982, p. 373–374.
  67. ^ Dienstag 1982, p. 130; Bylciw 1982, pp. 966–968; Wunsch 1981–1982, p. 371.
  68. ^ Parker 1982, pp. 431–432.
  69. ^ Binder 1982, pp. 138–139.
  70. ^ a b Dienstag 1982, p. 183.
  71. ^ Dienstag 1982, p. 131.
  72. ^ Bylciw 1982, p. 969.
  73. ^ Douglas 2016, pp. 47–48.

Works cited[edit]

Academic sources[edit]

  • Rinaldi, Matthew (1979). "The disturbing case of Feodor Fedorenko". Judaism. 28 (3): 293–303. ProQuest 1304359146.
  • Evans, Alona E. (1980). "Citizenship—denaturalization—failure to disclose service as concentration camp guard during Second World War". American Journal of International Law. 74 (1): 186–189. doi:10.2307/2200914.
  • Tuggle, Bernie M. (1981). "Fedorenko v. United States: The memories and emotions of World War II endure". Denver Journal of International Law & Policy. 10 (2): 367–373.
  • Wunsch, Gerald A. (1981–1982). "Should equitable discretion apply in denaturalization proceedings: Fedorenko v. United States". Immigration and Nationality Law Review. 5: 359–378.
  • Binder, Patricia A. (1982). "Fedorenko v. United States: A new test for misrepresentation in visa applications". North Carolina Journal of International Law. 7: 129–141. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
  • Bylciw, Diane Goffer (1982). "Immigration law--revocation of citizenship--Fedorenko v. United States". New York Law School Law Review. 27 (3): 951–970.
  • Dienstag, Abbe L. (1982). "Fedorenko v. United States: War crimes, the defense of duress, and American nationality law". Columbia Law Review. 82 (1): 120–183. doi:10.2307/1122241. JSTOR 1122241.
  • Parker, Jann M. (1982). "Establishing workable standards in denaturalization proceedings: Fedorenko v. United States". Connecticut Law Review. 14 (2): 409–434.
  • Ryan, Allan A. (1984). Quiet Neighbors: Prosecuting Nazi War Criminals in America. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Retrieved June 9, 2024.
  • Getschman, Gregory J. (1988). "The uncertain role of innocence in United States efforts to deport Nazi war criminals". Cornell International Law Journal. 21 (2): 287–316.
  • Bazyler, Michael J.; Tuerkheimer, Frank M. (2014). "The trial of Feodor Fedorenko: Treblinka relived in a Florida courtroom". Forgotten Trials of the Holocaust. New York University Press. pp. 247–273. ISBN 9781479899241. JSTOR j.ctt9qfr64.13.
  • Douglas, Lawrence (2016). The Right Wrong Man: John Demjanjuk and the Last Great Nazi War Crimes Trial. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400873159.
  • Belsan, Timothy M.; Gavoor, Aram A.; Marutollo, Joseph A. (2018). "The resurgence of denaturalization: The Supreme Court's decision in Maslenjak and its initial impact on civil and criminal cases seeking revocation of U.S. citizenship". Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice. 66 (1): 149–158.

Legal citations[edit]

  • Naturalization Act of 1906, Pub. L. 59–338, 34 Stat. 596.
  • Displaced Persons Act (1948), Pub. L. 80-744, 62 Stat. 1009.
  • IRO Constitution, Annex I Pt. II, 62 Stat. 3051, 18 U.N.T.S. at 20.
  • Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, Pub. L. 83-414, 66 Stat. 261.
  • Chaunt v. United States, 364 U.S. 350 (1960).
  • United States v. Fedorenko, 597 F.2d 496 (1979).
  • Fedorenko v. United States, 449 U.S. 490 (1981).

Other sources[edit]

See also[edit]

External links[edit]