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Seifert: Canada v. Michael Seifert
Decision – Finding of Facts , 13 Nov 2007, Federal Court, Canada
Between December 1944 and April 1945 Michael Seifert (also known as Misha), a Ukranian national who had joined the SS, served as a guard at the Bolzano transit concentration camp. He moved to Canada in 1951, obtaining Canadian citizenship by claiming he was born in Estonia and withholding the fact that he had been a Nazi SS prison guard.
On 24 November 2000, the Italian military tribunal of Verona convicted Michael Seifert in absentia of 11 murders committed at a prison camp in Bolzano during World War Two and sentenced him to life in prison. The Italian government started a procedure to have him extradited to Italy and the Canadian authorities started a procedure to have him stripped of his Canadian Citizenship and extradite him. Seifert acknowledged that he was at the Bolzano camp, but denied being involved in atrocities. The Federal Court of Canada ruled that the government was within its rights to revoke Michael Seifert's citizenship as he had lied to obtain it. The Court held that Seifert obtained entry to Canada and Canadian Citizenship by misrepresentation of his activities in World War II and non-disclosure of material facts. During the 1950’s, Canada had an immigration policy that barred former members of the SS and related units such as the SD (the German intelligence agency to the SS) from gaining entry to Canada and obtaining citizenship. Therefore the Court ruled that had he told the truth, Seifert would not have been allowed into Canada.
Milanović: Prosecutor's Office of Bosnia and Herzegovina v. Mladen Milanović
Indictment, 6 Dec 2007, Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Section I for War Crimes, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Mladen Milanović, who was a prison camp guard during the war in the former Yugoslavia, was accused of war crimes against civilians as he was alleged to have repeatedly allowed members of military and paramilitary forces to enter the camp and to abuse the captured civilians. After more than six years of proceedings before several courts in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Supreme Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina ultimately found Milanović guilty of the charged crimes and sentenced him to one year and four months in prison (with credit for time already spent in custody) on 14 January 2014.
Pejić: Office of the War Crimes Prosecutor v. Milorad Pejić
Indictment, 8 Apr 2008, District Court in Belgrade, War Crimes Chamber, Serbia-Montenegro
Milorad Pejić was born on 4 April 1969 in the village of Vukovar located in eastern Croatia. Pejić, who lived in the United Kingdom since 1999, was arrested in March 2008 at the airport in Belgrade when he wanted to bring a visit to his mother. He was charged with being involved in a horrific massacre that took place in November 1991. At that time, ethnic Croat prisoners were taken from the Vukovar hospital and subsequently brought to a pig farm in Ovčara, outside Vukovar. The prisoners were beaten, tortured and subsequently killed. Their bodies were buried in mass graves.
Menéndez et al.: Luciano Menéndez y otros (Causa Brandalisis)
Sentencia, 24 Jul 2008, Federal Oral Court No. 1 of Córdoba, Argentina
Bussi & Menéndez: Bussi y Menéndez (Causa Vargas Aignasse s/ Secuestro y desaparición)
Judgment, 28 Aug 2008, Federal Criminal Tribunal of Tucumán,, Argentina
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