Thursday, June 21, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine Thursday, June 21, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Nine War EDITOR'S NOTE - Tragedy after tragedy unfolds. Thousands upon thousands have been convicted. And still the World War II war crimes trials continue. With an extension of the statute of limitations, they could drag on into the 21st century. In Frankfurt on this day, six persons are before the ndurt... By OTTO DOELLING Associated Press Writer FRANKFURT, Germany - The court is in recess. The specta- tors, a mere half dozen, stand in a dimly lit stairwell outside the gallery and talk. "The judge is much too young to know how it was. He can't be more than 35." "THERE, YOU SEE. He never was a soldier. He should have been at the front. Then he would have obeyed orders just like we had to do." "Aw, it's all a waste of time, if you ask me. The sentences are already decided." "Decided how?" "You wait. One thing is clear. They won't be found innocent. So much money isn't spent to acquit anybody." THE VOICES ECHO West Ger- many's weary cynicism over war crimes trials, which have gone on almost continuously since the collapse of Hitler's Third Reich. crimes trials dra With the 1965 extension of the statute of limitations for wartime ~murders, the trials theoretically could drag on into the 21st cen- tury. Though few remember Mo- krow, Lachwa, Luniniec, Dawd, Gorodok, Gorodiscze, Wysock, Stolin, Janow, Drohotshin or Pinsk, their stories are told vir- tually without respite, revealing tragedies a thousand fold. So far, West German courts have found more than 6,000 persons guilty of war crimes.. Yet, after nearly three decades, the West German trials have be- come so routine they attract scant public attention. They un- fold quietly, like a passion of Jewish suffering and German guilt performed before near emp- ty houses. ON THIS DAY, six persons are before the court. Ten years before, when the indictments were issued, there were 18. But death and infirmity have intervened - what Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal has called the "biological solution." One of the remaining six de- fendants is Johann Josef Kuhr. LIKE FOUR of the others, Kuhr belonged to paramilitary Police Battalion 306, headquar- tered in Lublin, Poland. The bat- talion was responsible for seal- ing off ghettos, rounding up Jews and escorting them to execution trenches outside of towns. The sick and resisting were shot on the spot, or en route. "The Jews were the poorest of the poor. It was a crying injus- tice what was done to them," Kuhr says to a newsman outside the courtroom. He fastidiously cups a hand under the long ash of his cigarette and makes re- peated trips to an ashtray 10 feet away. "I'm all for punishing the people who were responsible for war crimes. But not just in Germany - also those in Rus- sia and the United States. The Americans seem to be trying to come to terms with the problem . . I think too much was made of My Lai, though." KUHR IS charged with aiding in the murder of 16,200 Jews at Pinsk, and with executing 6,000 Soviet prisoners of war at Biala Podlaska. He does not- consider himself responsiblefor what happened at Pinsk and Biala Podlaska, but he has been forced to live under their grim shadows for nearly 10 years, awaiting the start of his long-delayed trial. He was arrested in 1962, spent six days in jail and then was re- leased on bail of 25,000 marks - $6,250. Since war crimes are not cov- ered by West Germany's crimi- nal code and since a genocide statute cannot be applied ex post facto, the six are being tried under statutes dealing with or- dinary homicides. THE SPECIFIC charge is aid- ing and abetting murder. The court reasons that they acted un- der orders, did not show exces- sive zeal and derived no personal rewards from their deeds. "Butcher" Petsch is said to have bragged about his handi- work to SS comrades who tended to shun him, and decades later he discusses without remorse how he went about the slaughter. The court notes he does so like other people talk about every- day jobs. Petsch's lawyer pleads that his client was too dimwitted to have known he was doing wrong. The court orders Petsch tested. A New & Important WAR and POLITICS available at 316 S. State St. psychologist determines that, while Petsch is far from intelli- gent, the test-results are within the norm. Petsch seems strange- ly pleased by the findings that are to seal his conviction. One of the original accused was declared an imbecile, and his case was suspended at the very outset of the trial. "I THOUGHT then that an or- der was sacred," defendant Ru- dolf Eckert tells the court. The argument is as old as war- fare and is accepted only as ex- tenuation by the court. In find- ing all six guilty, the court rules: "The actions cannot be jus- tified on the basis of orders since the orders themselves were il- legal and far exceeded every con- ceivable authority." "BUTCHER" Petsch receives the highest sentence - 5 years. The other sentences range from two and a half to four years. In explaining the relatively mild verdict, Judge Adalbert Schaefer describes the six as "themselves victims of inhuman times .. "If a taxi cab driver is killed, everybody calls for the re-intro- duction of the death penalty," Schaefer tells a newsman. "BUT HERE no rooster crows for it. Most want an end to these trials - not that we ourselves are so enthusiastic about them. We conduct them only because the lawmakers have commission- ed us to do so." Schafer, who is 43, never was at the front as such, but the strapping six - footer did serve with a flack battery toward the end of the war. Pending appeals, including one by the prosecution, the six are continued free on bail. KUHR RECEIVES the lightest sentence - two and a half years g on instead of the eight demanded by the prosecution. He is convicted of aiding in the murder of the Jews at Pinsk, but acquitted of taking part in the execution of the Russian POWs. "A gross injustice," Kuhr com- plains as he leaves the court- room. "I never did a thing to a Jew." He motions back toward the chamber, his mouth drawn down scornfully. "It's easy enough to open up one's mouth nowadays," He adds. "Then it was a com- pletely different matter." Be careful with fire: There are babes inthe woods. M UNION BILLIARDS and BOWLING OPEN 11 A.M. MON.-SAT. Their morning stroll Tiao, the chimpanzee, takes his constitutional with Pacifico Soares, Rio de Janiero's chief zoo keeper. Soares, who has been close to animals since he ran away at the age of seven to be a circus lion tamer, said "all the zoo workers hate me because I am always checking to see how they feed the animals. 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