From the ArcaMax Publishing, News & Features Newsletter:
http://www.arcamax.com/news/newsheadlines/s-575173-966255
BERLIN (UPI) -- John Demjanjuk, the former U.S. auto worker suspected
of Nazi war crimes, has been ruled fit by doctors to stand trial,
prosecutors said Friday.
Demjanjuk, 89, was deported in May from the United States to Germany,
where he was wanted for alleged involvement in about 29,000 killings
as an SS guard at Sobibor, a World War II Nazi death camp in Poland.
Munich State Prosecutor Anton Winkler said that although deemed fit
for trial, doctors have restricted the time he can be tried each day
to two sessions of 90 minutes each, CNN reported.
Demjanjuk, a native Ukrainian, has long denied any role in the
Holocaust and claimed he was a prisoner of war, not a death camp
guard.
This would be Demjanjuk's second war crimes trial. He was convicted in
an Israeli trial in the 1970s and sentenced to death but the sentence
was overturned when mistaken identity was proven.