House approves bill to stop Nazi benefit payments
House unanimously approves bill to end payment of Social Security benefits to former Nazis
The measure would shut a loophole that allowed suspected Nazis to be paid millions of dollars in benefits. Under the bill, benefits would be terminated for Nazi suspects who have lost their American citizenship, a step called denaturalization. U.S. law currently mandates a higher threshold — a final order of deportation — before Social Security benefits can be stopped.
The legislation was introduced after an Associated Press investigation published in October revealed that Social Security benefits have been paid to dozens of former Nazis after they were forced out of the United States.
AP's investigation found that the Justice Department used a legal loophole to persuade Nazi suspects to leave the U.S. in exchange for Social Security benefits. If they agreed to go voluntarily, or simply fled the country before being deported, they could keep their benefits. The Justice Department denied using Social Security payments as a way to expel former Nazis.
Rep. Leonard Lance, R-N.J., said the House action would "correct an injustice of two generations and right a terrible wrong in the name of the lives that were lost as a result of the Holocaust."
The
unanimous vote showed that "our resolve for justice is unyielding and
our commitment to pursue what is right continues even 70 years after
World War II," said Lance, a co-sponsor of the bill and co-chair of the
Republican Israel Caucus.
"We
cannot allow Social Security benefits to continue flowing to those
guilty of the worst atrocities in modern history," added Rep. Carolyn
Maloney, D-N.Y. Maloney previously called on the Obama administration to
investigate the payments, which she described as a "gross misuse of
taxpayer dollars."
The
House vote came as two Republican senators demanded that the Obama
administration provide Congress with records explaining how suspected
Nazis received the payments and the role the Justice Department played
in the program.
Sens.
Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Orrin Hatch of Utah cited the AP
investigation in letters sent to Attorney General Eric Holder and
Carolyn Colvin, the acting commissioner of the Social Security
Administration. Grassley and Hatch back legislation introduced in the
Senate to strip former Nazis of their Social Security benefits. A vote
on the Senate bill is expected in the coming weeks.
In
the new Congress that begins in January, Grassley will chair the Senate
Judiciary Committee and Hatch will helm the Senate Finance Committee.
The
Social Security Administration refused AP's request that it provide the
total number of Nazi suspects who received benefits and the dollar
amounts. AP appealed the agency's denial of the information through the
Freedom of Information Act.
Former
Auschwitz guard Jakob Denzinger, who fled the United States in 1989 and
lives in Croatia, collects a Social Security payment of about $1,500 a
month, the AP found.
The
White House and the Social Security Administration signaled support for
denying benefits to former Nazis following AP's report. The Justice
Department said it is open to considering proposals that would terminate
the Social Security payments.
Grassley
and Hatch are seeking broad categories of data — such as the total
number of Nazis who received Social Security benefits and the dollar
amount of those payments — and details about specific cases. For
example, they want to know if a former SS unit commander named Michael
Karkoc, whom the AP located last year in Minnesota, would be able to
retain his benefits even if removed to another country.
They're
also requesting copies of communications between the Justice Department
and Social Security Administration and the Justice Department and State
Department regarding Nazi suspects who left the United States. AP
reported that the State Department and the Social Security
Administration voiced serious concerns over the methods used by the
Justice Department's Nazi-hunting unit, the Office of Special
Investigations.
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Associated
Press writer David Rising in Berlin and investigative researcher Randy
Herschaft in New York contributed to this report.
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