*/
Delving into Britain’s investigations of Nazi collaborators who found refuge in the UK after WWII, Jon Silverman reveals previously undisclosed criteria which severely restricted the possibility of prosecutions
The War Crimes Act, passed after much controversy in 1991, presented British lawyers with an unprecedented challenge: how to fit the crimes of the Holocaust into a common law template of justice more than 70 years later. In the event, the challenge was sidestepped. When considering cases, Treasury Counsel and the Crown Prosecution Service declined to deviate from the normative requirements of a murder prosecution. Without forensic evidence, for obvious reasons, they relied on incontrovertible identification of a defendant and live eye witnesses prepared to testify in open court. Documentary testimony gathered contemporaneously by NKVD investigators after the war was largely eschewed, no matter how probative. The outcome was that, out of 274 suspects investigated by the police, only one conviction was obtained. The title of our book, Safe Haven, refers to the sanctuary many mass murderers found in the UK, disturbed only towards the end of their lives by a visit or two to a police station and a letter from the CPS telling them that there was insufficient evidence to take the matter further.
Many of those practising at the Bar may well say that this is the price of conforming to precedent in a system of jury-based justice. Why should exceptions have been made even when dealing with the greatest act of mass murder of the 20th century? But delve a little further, as we have, and you find that certain exceptions were made, some never disclosed and others only made public at the tail end of the investigative process.
For example, a confidential decision was taken to limit potential prosecutions to those cases where the victims were Jewish civilians, excluding the myriad of killings committed against the non-Jewish populations of Eastern Europe. Senior Treasury Counsel, Sir John Nutting, KC, justified this approach by saying:
We felt it would have unnecessarily complicated the prosecution because such crimes [against non-Jewish civilians] would have been called war reprisals.
Another factor which undermines the claim that these were normative charging decisions was the imposition of an arbitrary threshold: only those who had been ‘in a position of command’ would face the prospect of trial. This criterion cannot be found in the War Crimes Act and runs counter to the principle, established at Nuremberg, that obeying orders was not an adequate defence. William (Bill) Clegg KC, who defended Andrzej Sawoniuk, the only person to be convicted, told us:
I thought it [the command criterion] was a sensible decision because there were never going to be many trials and the prosecution was aware of how a jury might react to a foot soldier being tried.
However, this argument is weakened by examining the charges against Sawoniuk and the evidence presented at his trial which inculpated him on the strength of his own individual responsibility – including the machine gun murder of 15 Jewish women – and not because he held a command role. Furthermore, the former head of War Crimes Casework at the CPS, Rajka Vlahovic, has confirmed that the issue of command responsibility played no part in the evidence adduced at trial.
Perhaps the most consequential decision taken by the Crown was to hold an ‘old-style’ full committal in the prosecution of the first person to face charges, Szymon Serafinowicz. The Hetherington-Chalmers inquiry which recommended the law change that led to the War Crimes Act, made the very strong point that potential defendants and witnesses would be elderly and quite possibly in frail health and that therefore speed would be of the essence in bringing cases to trial. To this end, the inquiry advocated that ‘the procedure of transfer to the Crown Court [should be] without any committal proceedings.’
This recommendation was rejected. Nutting’s justification was that these were unique cases and it would benefit both prosecution and defence if the evidence was fully tested before a stipendiary magistrate ahead of a trial. Serafinowicz was already 84, though in reasonable health, when he was charged in July 1995. The committal in 1996 lasted six weeks and was followed later in the year by an abuse of process challenge. By early 1997 when an Old Bailey trial was scheduled, the defendant had developed Alzheimer’s and was found unfit to instruct his legal team. The prosecution collapsed. Nutting told us:
We didn’t anticipate that Serafinowicz would put forward a defence that he was unfit to stand trial but if the charge is that we bent over backwards to favour the defendant I can live with that. And if people say ‘he got away with it’, one could reply that it also deprived us of a possible conviction.
Had the Crown acted with more urgency, Serafinowicz could have been charged far earlier than he was. All of the substantive evidence had been gathered by the Spring of 1995 and the CPS was satisfied that it had a solid case to submit to the Attorney-General, who alone could authorise a charge. But according to the former head of War Crimes Casework at the CPS, Paul Harrison, no decision was made for several months:
The AG [Sir Nicholas Lyell] sat on it for some time, perhaps because he couldn’t make up his mind. The particular reason for the delay though was that he wanted a number of extra checks made. But I stress that no more information was added to the file whatsoever after I submitted it.
Despite the flawed decision-making, at least it can be said that the Serafinowicz case resulted in a charge. Another suspect, a Latvian living in Milton Keynes, did not even suffer that indignity. Harijs Svikeris had been a senior officer in the Arãjs Kommando, a notorious antisemitic, nationalist militia which aided the Nazis in exterminating the Jewish population of Latvia. When the War Crimes Act became law in 1991 there were expectations that he would be the first person to be charged. After he retired as the first head of Scotland Yard’s war crimes unit, Detective Chief Superintendent Eddie Bathgate, told me:
Svikeris was a powerful case and I would cheerfully have put him on the charge sheet. The more we investigated him, the stronger the case got. There was no dispute about identification, he was a volunteer and admitted during the interviews that he was present when massacres took place, without an actual confession of guilt… but the CPS wouldn’t move off the fence and make a recommendation to prosecute.
Their reluctance was largely because surviving cohort witnesses from Svikeris’s platoon could not be persuaded to testify at the Old Bailey that they had seen him kill, and despite strong evidence gathered at the end of the war and later.
This is also a story about a palpable lack of transparency. Neither Scotland Yard nor the CPS published a final report on the war crimes inquiries relating to World War II. Had they done so, some of the issues raised in this article might have been addressed at the time. The sad truth is that the due process of law denied to their victims by the Nazis and their collaborators shielded many of the perpetrators to the bitter end.
The War Crimes Act, passed after much controversy in 1991, presented British lawyers with an unprecedented challenge: how to fit the crimes of the Holocaust into a common law template of justice more than 70 years later. In the event, the challenge was sidestepped. When considering cases, Treasury Counsel and the Crown Prosecution Service declined to deviate from the normative requirements of a murder prosecution. Without forensic evidence, for obvious reasons, they relied on incontrovertible identification of a defendant and live eye witnesses prepared to testify in open court. Documentary testimony gathered contemporaneously by NKVD investigators after the war was largely eschewed, no matter how probative. The outcome was that, out of 274 suspects investigated by the police, only one conviction was obtained. The title of our book, Safe Haven, refers to the sanctuary many mass murderers found in the UK, disturbed only towards the end of their lives by a visit or two to a police station and a letter from the CPS telling them that there was insufficient evidence to take the matter further.
Many of those practising at the Bar may well say that this is the price of conforming to precedent in a system of jury-based justice. Why should exceptions have been made even when dealing with the greatest act of mass murder of the 20th century? But delve a little further, as we have, and you find that certain exceptions were made, some never disclosed and others only made public at the tail end of the investigative process.
For example, a confidential decision was taken to limit potential prosecutions to those cases where the victims were Jewish civilians, excluding the myriad of killings committed against the non-Jewish populations of Eastern Europe. Senior Treasury Counsel, Sir John Nutting, KC, justified this approach by saying:
We felt it would have unnecessarily complicated the prosecution because such crimes [against non-Jewish civilians] would have been called war reprisals.
Another factor which undermines the claim that these were normative charging decisions was the imposition of an arbitrary threshold: only those who had been ‘in a position of command’ would face the prospect of trial. This criterion cannot be found in the War Crimes Act and runs counter to the principle, established at Nuremberg, that obeying orders was not an adequate defence. William (Bill) Clegg KC, who defended Andrzej Sawoniuk, the only person to be convicted, told us:
I thought it [the command criterion] was a sensible decision because there were never going to be many trials and the prosecution was aware of how a jury might react to a foot soldier being tried.
However, this argument is weakened by examining the charges against Sawoniuk and the evidence presented at his trial which inculpated him on the strength of his own individual responsibility – including the machine gun murder of 15 Jewish women – and not because he held a command role. Furthermore, the former head of War Crimes Casework at the CPS, Rajka Vlahovic, has confirmed that the issue of command responsibility played no part in the evidence adduced at trial.
Perhaps the most consequential decision taken by the Crown was to hold an ‘old-style’ full committal in the prosecution of the first person to face charges, Szymon Serafinowicz. The Hetherington-Chalmers inquiry which recommended the law change that led to the War Crimes Act, made the very strong point that potential defendants and witnesses would be elderly and quite possibly in frail health and that therefore speed would be of the essence in bringing cases to trial. To this end, the inquiry advocated that ‘the procedure of transfer to the Crown Court [should be] without any committal proceedings.’
This recommendation was rejected. Nutting’s justification was that these were unique cases and it would benefit both prosecution and defence if the evidence was fully tested before a stipendiary magistrate ahead of a trial. Serafinowicz was already 84, though in reasonable health, when he was charged in July 1995. The committal in 1996 lasted six weeks and was followed later in the year by an abuse of process challenge. By early 1997 when an Old Bailey trial was scheduled, the defendant had developed Alzheimer’s and was found unfit to instruct his legal team. The prosecution collapsed. Nutting told us:
We didn’t anticipate that Serafinowicz would put forward a defence that he was unfit to stand trial but if the charge is that we bent over backwards to favour the defendant I can live with that. And if people say ‘he got away with it’, one could reply that it also deprived us of a possible conviction.
Had the Crown acted with more urgency, Serafinowicz could have been charged far earlier than he was. All of the substantive evidence had been gathered by the Spring of 1995 and the CPS was satisfied that it had a solid case to submit to the Attorney-General, who alone could authorise a charge. But according to the former head of War Crimes Casework at the CPS, Paul Harrison, no decision was made for several months:
The AG [Sir Nicholas Lyell] sat on it for some time, perhaps because he couldn’t make up his mind. The particular reason for the delay though was that he wanted a number of extra checks made. But I stress that no more information was added to the file whatsoever after I submitted it.
Despite the flawed decision-making, at least it can be said that the Serafinowicz case resulted in a charge. Another suspect, a Latvian living in Milton Keynes, did not even suffer that indignity. Harijs Svikeris had been a senior officer in the Arãjs Kommando, a notorious antisemitic, nationalist militia which aided the Nazis in exterminating the Jewish population of Latvia. When the War Crimes Act became law in 1991 there were expectations that he would be the first person to be charged. After he retired as the first head of Scotland Yard’s war crimes unit, Detective Chief Superintendent Eddie Bathgate, told me:
Svikeris was a powerful case and I would cheerfully have put him on the charge sheet. The more we investigated him, the stronger the case got. There was no dispute about identification, he was a volunteer and admitted during the interviews that he was present when massacres took place, without an actual confession of guilt… but the CPS wouldn’t move off the fence and make a recommendation to prosecute.
Their reluctance was largely because surviving cohort witnesses from Svikeris’s platoon could not be persuaded to testify at the Old Bailey that they had seen him kill, and despite strong evidence gathered at the end of the war and later.
This is also a story about a palpable lack of transparency. Neither Scotland Yard nor the CPS published a final report on the war crimes inquiries relating to World War II. Had they done so, some of the issues raised in this article might have been addressed at the time. The sad truth is that the due process of law denied to their victims by the Nazis and their collaborators shielded many of the perpetrators to the bitter end.
Delving into Britain’s investigations of Nazi collaborators who found refuge in the UK after WWII, Jon Silverman reveals previously undisclosed criteria which severely restricted the possibility of prosecutions
The beginning of the legal year offers the opportunity for a renewed commitment to justice and the rule of law both at home and abroad
By Louise Crush of Westgate Wealth Management sets out the key steps to your dream property
A centre of excellence for youth justice, the Youth Justice Legal Centre provides specialist training, an advice line and a membership programme
By Kem Kemal of Henry Dannell
By Ashley Friday of AlphaBiolabs
Providing bespoke mortgage and protection solutions for barristers
Joanna Hardy-Susskind speaks to those walking away from the criminal Bar
Tom Cosgrove KC looks at the government’s radical planning reform and the opportunities and challenges ahead for practitioners
From a traumatic formative education to exceptional criminal silk – Laurie-Anne Power KC talks about her path to the Bar, pursuit of equality and speaking out against discrimination (not just during Black History Month)
James Onalaja concludes his two-part opinion series
Yasmin Ilhan explains the Law Commission’s proposals for a quicker, easier and more effective contempt of court regime