Supreme Court won’t hear appeal from former Nazi death squad member
Jewish groups across the country hailed the Supreme Court’s decision not to allow an elderly man who lied about his time working for a Nazi death squad to continue his fight to retain Canadian citizenship, while his family decried the move as a miscarriage of justice.
The Supreme Court, as per its custom, did not provide reasons for refusing to hear the appeal from Helmut Oberlander. But the decision — the latest in a legal saga that’s stretched on since 1995 — means the 95-year-old man is now one step closer to formal deportation from Canada.
The Ukrainian-born Oberlander was a member of the Ek 10a, a mobile death squad that operated behind the German army’s front line in the eastern occupied territories and was part of a force responsible for killing millions of people, most of them Jews, during the Second World War.
Oberlander has long maintained that he did not take part in any atrocities, but Jewish groups said his mere membership in the squad should bar him from continued residency in Canada.