*************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; DEMANUK.010 = Jan 1991 excerpt to Gazette; 1993-09-27 *************************************************************************** Dear Subscribers: In examining my files, I ran across the following excerpt written in early 1991, concerning the Demjanjuk case. I am posting it for your information: --------------------------------------------------------------------------- To balance our positive commentaries, we have chosen 3 topics on which we feel the Gazette should be chastised: 1. Demjanjuk Trial John Demjanjuk was accused by the Office of Special Investigation (OSI) of the U.S. Justice Department of falsifying his place of birth on his 1951 immigration application, stripped of his U.S. citizenship in February 1981 and subsequently extradited to the state of Israel on Feb. 27, 1986. In November of that year he was charged with perpetrating atrocities in Treblinka between July 1942 and Aug. 2, 1943. At the conclusion of the trial lasting from Feb. 16, 1987 to Apr. 18, 1988, he was found guilty by the three lower court judges and sentenced to death by hanging. John Demjanjuk has steadfastly maintained that he was never in Treblinka and that he is a victim of mistaken identity. An increasing amount of evidence has surfaced indicating that the OSI and the Israeli prosecution withheld exculpatory evidence from the courts and from the Demjanjuk defense. Some of this evidence was obtained via FOIA suits by the Demjanjuk family against the OSI. Other documents were retrieved from the garbage as the OSI attempted to destroy key evidence contradicting prosecution testimony. Still more evidence was forthcoming from German and Polish witnesses. The Appeal before the Supreme Court of Israel, originally scheduled for Dec. 5, 1988, was postponed until April 1989 because of the defenestration of defense attorney Dov Eitan and an acid attack on attorney Yoram Sheftel. Due to further delays and the presentation of new evidence, the Appeal did not officially commence until May 14, 1990 and was adjourned on June 29, 1990 for 6 months to permit new evidence to be obtained. Most recently, the Supreme Court heard further evidence on Dec. 27 and 31, 1990, after prosecution attorney Michael Shaked made a secret trip to Moscow to corroborate the existence of further exculpatory evidence. The world news media, including the Montreal Gazette provided massive coverage of the initial stages of the Jeruaslem show trial when the prosecution was presenting its case. Coverage of the case for the defense was perfunctory, at best, and slanted to exclude or distort key pieces of evidence beneficial to the defense. Thereafter, the Gazette appeared to make a concerted effort to ignore the Demjanjuk case. They declined to interview Yoram Sheftel or John Demjanjuk Jr. when they were in Montreal in September 1989 addressing the McGill Law faculty on the case. At the invitation of the Gazette, the head of the Charitable Committee in Aid of John Demjanjuk's Family (Montreal), Lily Zuzak, submitted an article titled OSI Misconduct Confirmed in Demjanjuk Case (see Addendum A). Summaries of the Civil Action Suit No. 86-2802-LFO, Nishnic vs OSI, 1989-09-12; OSI reply, 1989-09-16; Nishnic reply to OSI, 1989-11-15 were provided as background material. Also, addresses and phone numbers of Ed Nishnic and his attorney, John Broadley, were requested by and provided to the Gazette. After much procrastination the Gazette finally refused to publish the article without citing any reason for the refusal (see Addendum B). During all of 1990, only 10 articles plus 2 letters appeared in the Gazette between the dates May 8 and June 29 reporting on the Demjanjuk Appeal. We have not as yet been able to cross reference these articles against the Appeal transcripts. However, particularly noticeable was that out of the 10 articles, there were 8 references to "Ukrainian-born" and 6 references to "850,000 Jews died in Treblinka". This continues in the tradition of the Gazette reporting on the 1987-88 Jerusalem Trial during which these terms were used 68 and 59 times respectively in 83 articles between Feb. 20, 1987 and Jan. 28, 1988. Secondly, only in the 2 letters written by Demjanjuk supporters was any reference made to the nefarious role of the OSI in suborning perjury and withholding exculpatory evidence from the Demjanjuk defense. Finally, the Gazette did not report on prosecutor Shaked's secret visit to Moscow, nor the Israeli Supreme Court sittings on Dec. 27 and 31, 1990. *************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; DEMANUK.010 = Jan 1991 excerpt to Gazette; 1991-09-27 ***************************************************************************