Nazi hunter seeks investigation of 90-year-old Danish man
HELSINKI -- A leading Nazi hunter has asked Denmark to investigate a 90-year-old Dane suspected of being involved in the mass murder of Jews in Belarus during World War II.
Ephraim Zuroff of the Simon Wiesenthal Center filed the request Tuesday with the Copenhagen police after the Justice Ministry last year turned down a similar request saying it was not their matter.
Zuroff told the AP they had a strong case against Helmuth Leif Rasmussen because of documents found by Danish historians published in a book last year, and that they were looking at other cases. The book, "En skole i vold" (A Book of Violence), claims that 1,400 Jews died in Belarus when Rasmussen, now known by the name Rasboel, was in the "inner circle" of the Bobruisk camp run by the SS.
"Some of these people were involved in terrible crimes," Zuroff said. "Now we're looking for additional Danish Waffen SS who served in this camp. This might only be the tip of the iceberg."
Some 6,000 Danish volunteers joined the SS during World War II after the German army invaded the country in 1940.
Prosecutors said they would review the material before deciding if they need further information.
"It is a matter we take very seriously," Morten Nils Jakobsen from the state prosecutor's office of serious economic and international crimes told Danish news agency Ritzau.
Rasboel, who lives in Copenhagen, has acknowledged in interviews that he had been a guard and a member of the SS, but has denied involvement in killings.
One of the authors of the book, Dennis Larsen, who has interviewed Rasboel twice, says he admitted seeing Jews "being killed and thrown into mass graves."
"But he always said he was a bystander," Larsen said. "He said he was just a guard, nothing else."