FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CRM June 26, 1996 (202) 514-2008 TDD (202) 514-1888 COURT REVOKES U.S. CITIZENSHIP OF FORMER SECURITY POLICE OFFICIAL IN NAZI-OCCUPIED LITHUANIA WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Department of Justice announced today that it has won a default judgment in U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia revoking the United States citizenship of Kazys Gimzauskas, a former resident of St. Petersburg, Florida, presently residing in Lithuania, based on his involvement in arrests and killings in Lithuania in collaboration with the Nazis during World War II. In October 1995, the Criminal Division's Office of Special Investigations (OSI) and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia filed a complaint seeking to revoke Gimzauskas' U.S. citizenship. The complaint alleged that from 1941 through 1944, Gimzauskas, 88, was a senior official in two units of the Nazi-sponsored Lithuanian Security Police, the Saugumas. The Saugumas had special responsibility for Jewish matters which corresponded closely to that borne by the German Gestapo, the Nazi secret police. The Saugumas played an integral role in the implementation of Nazi racial policy in Lithuania, particularly the annihilation of Lithuania's Jews. The Saugumas was a component of Einsatzkommando 3 (Operational Detachment 3), a unit of the German Security Police and Service responsible for the physical destruction of the Jews of Lithuania, among other tasks. The complaint alleged that Gimzauskas headed the Saugumas Interrogations/Investigations Section in Kaunas, Lithuania, from July 1941 until October or November 1941 and that he thereafter served until July 1944 in Vilnius, Lithuania, as Deputy Chief of the Saugumas for Vilnius Province. Kaunas was the wartime capital of Lithuania; Vilnius is the present capital. In his latter position, Gimzauskas was second-in-command to Vilnius Province Saugumas Chief Aleksandras Lileikis. Lileikis was ordered denaturalized by a federal court in Boston on May 24, 1996, on the basis of the court's determination that "tens of thousands died under his command of the Saugumas." Lileikis subsequently fled the United States and returned to Lithuania on June 19, 1996. OSI has also filed a denaturalization suit against Algimantas Dailide, a former Vilnius Saugumas member now living in Cleveland. The case against Dailide is in the pretrial discovery stage with trial scheduled for November. Documents signed by Gimzauskas and found by OSI in the Lithuanian Central State Archives confirm his Saugumas service and prove that he personally ordered the arrest, interrogation, and incarceration of civilians. These documents establish that he ordered civilians, primarily Jews, turned over to the German Security Police for execution. The complaint quotes extensively from examples of these documents, one of which shows Gimzauskas dispatching for execution an American-born woman who had been arrested because she was "suspected of being a Jew." Gimzauskas entered the United States in 1956 under the Refugee Relief Act of 1953. The complaint charged that he was not eligible to enter the United States, however, since the Act barred the entry of those who had "personally advocated or assisted in the persecution of any person or group of persons because of race, religion, or national origin." Gimzauskas abandoned his U.S. residence and returned to Lithuania more than two years ago, while he was under investigation by OSI. "This is a significant victory in the U.S. Government's vigorous law enforcement effort in cases of suspected participants in Nazi-sponsored acts of persecution," OSI Director Eli M. Rosenbaum stated. "Others who, like Kazys Gimzauskas, played a provable role in the Nazi regime's genocidal reign of terror should be on notice that the Government remains steadfast in its commitment to tracing them, revoking their ill-gotten U.S. citizenships, and removing them from these shores as expeditiously as possible," he added. Rosenbaum noted that the post-Cold War access gained by OSI to archives in the formerly communist countries of eastern and central Europe had "significantly enhanced" the Department's ability to identify and take legal action against former participants in Nazi persecution who immigrated to the United States after World War II. The Gimzauskas prosecution, Rosenbaum added, was a direct consequence of this new-found access. Since OSI began operation in 1979, 57 Nazi persecutors have been stripped of U.S. citizenship and 48 such persons have been removed from the United States. More than 300 persons remain under investigation. # # # 95-302