THE VOLVO 850. AVAILABLE IN TWO SIZES: Both the front wheel drive Volvo 850 Sedan and 850 Sportswagon come equipped with a peppy 168 horsepower engine. Four wheel anti-lock disc brakes. And Delta-Link rear suspension. OSI Files Against `Collaborators' Both have been designed with a sleeker, more eye-catching body style. And both are available at your local Volvo dealer. Stop by and try one on for size. We'll make sure you get a perfect fit. VO L VO Drive safely. Suits against two possible Nazi abettors puts new limelight on understaffed agency. REGULAR. JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT . T ' • ........... , ...... ..... THE 1995 VOLVO 850 SEDAN: $25,580* EXTRA LARGE. ........ • • • • • • -•-•••••••••••••••••... • • THE 1995 VOLVO 850 SPORTSWAGON: $26,880* '95s IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Michigan's #1 Volvo Dealer DWYER AND 624-0400 SONS Maple Rd. West of Haggerty *Includes automatic transmission, all standard equipment. 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Oct. 31, 1994 LINCOLN PARK ARTERS • ALTERNATORS • FAN BELTS • FLOOR MATS • SEAT COVERS • JUMPER CABLES • BRAKE SPECIAL • WIPERS he Office of Special Investi- gations, the Justice Depart- ment agency charged with finding and prosecuting Nazi war criminals, has an- nounced two high-profile cases that could deport alleged Nazi col- laborators who concealed their pasts when entering this country. In both cases, legal action be- came possible after OSI obtained long-unavailable government doc- uments from Lithuanian archives. In what they called the agency's most important case in several years, OSI lawyers have accused Aleksandras Lileikis, an 87-year-old resident of Norwood, Mass., of heading the Nazi-spon- sored Lithuanian Security Police for Vilnius. Nazis killed at least 55,000 of Vilnius' Jews. The OSI complaint alleges that from August 1941 to July 1944, Mr. Lileikis was "personally re- sponsible for the arrest, detention and execution ofJews, those who aided Jews, suspected commu- nists and other civilians." The government also moved to revoke the citizenship of Juozas Budreika, 77, a retired cook liv- ing in Gulfport, Fla., who applied to immigrate to the United States m in 1958 and became a U.S. citi- to zen in 1967. z Mr. Budreika, according to OSI, -4 was part of a Lithuanian military group controlled by the Nazis that • C) killed thousands of Jews in 0 Lithuania and Byelorussia. m According to OSI, Mr. Lileikis C) left a paper trail documenting his misdeeds in the form of signed or- ders for the arrest ofJews. Many C were then executed in the killing -4 0 pits in the Paneriai woods outside U) m Vilnius or in Nazi concentration 0 C camps. -4 At a news conference, acting OSI director Eli Rosenbaum de- scribed two of the Vilnius victims — 6-year-old Fruma Kaplan and her mother, Gita. Arrested for z fleeing the Jewish ghetto, they were ultimately executed. Orders -4 0 signed by Mr. Lileikis and un- 0 cn covered by OSI investigators sug- • gest that he played a significant C) role in their fate. Mr. Lileikis applied for admis- w sion to this country as an immi- • m grant in 1955, and gained his z 0 citizenship in 1976. Government z m action to revoke his citizenship is based on allegations that he con- C z cealed his Nazi past upon enter- ing this country. -0 "This is a person who was sig- nificantly involved in the fate that befell many, many Jews in Vil- nius," Mr. Rosenbaum said in an interview. "This case involves someone who was operating at a high level in the hierarchy of per- secution." The Lileikis case, he said, strikes a particularly sensitive nerve because of Vilnius' impor- tance in pre-war Jewish life. "It was," he said, "one of the three pre-eminent cities in the world, in terms of Jewish culture, scholarship, religious life, intel- lectual life and Zionist activity. The destruction of its Jewish com- munity was a particularly tragic event." The two high-profile cases rep- resent something of a turnabout for the underfunded, understaffed agency. "All of us expected that by 1994 ... [OSI activity] would be winding down," Mr. Rosenbaum said. "Indeed, that was the pat- tern we had been seeing since the mid-1980s. But it has shot up in the past two years. We're now fil- ing cases at the fastest pace in our history." The new prosecutions may help remove the shadow cast over The primary reason, he said, is the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the opening of gov- ernment archives throughout central and eastern Europe to of- ficial Nazi hunters from the West. It was that kind of information that provided the basis for last week's actions in the Lileikis and Budreika cases. But there are concerns in Washington that a shrinking OSI may not have the resources to take full advantage of this sud- den wealth of information. OSI presently is investigating at least 300 people. As investiga- tors slowly peruse newly opened state archives, that number could shoot up. But OSI's staff has decreased from a peak of 50 in the 1980s to its current level of 32. This is not enough, say some observers, to take full advantage of the newly available records. OSI page 60