An 88-year-old man living in Michigan who is now the subject of a criminal
investigation in Poland into allegations he shot Jews while working
in a Nazi-controlled police unit during World War II insists he
did nothing wrong.
Polish officials are investigating what happened nearly 70 years ago in what is now the Ukrainian city of Lviv. The U.S. Justice Department has also agreed to help by questioning John Kalymon about murder, death camps and other atrocities against Jews there in 1942.
“I don’t feel guilty,” the white-haired, retired auto engineer told the Associated Press during a brief visit Monday to his Troy home.
His lawyer is resisting the investigation.
“He guarded a stack of coal from looters. He didn’t expend any rounds of ammunition and didn’t commit any atrocities,” Elias Xenos said of his client’s work for the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police when Kalymon was in his early 20s. “He’s disappointed that one or more governments are still trying to pursue him based on flimsy evidence.”
The U.S. government became aware of Kalymon after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. World War II-era archives that had been inaccessible revealed people who may have concealed their Axis allegiance when they entered the United States decades ago.
In 2007, after a civil trial, a federal judge in Detroit stripped Kalymon of his citizenship, saying his two years in the Ukrainian police resulted in the persecution of civilians.
The government produced a handwritten document in which “Iv Kalymun” reported firing four shots, killing one Jew and injuring another. Kalymon admits he spelled his last name both ways when he was a young man, but says he did not go by “Kalymun” when he was a Ukrainian officer. He denied shooting Jews and said the record was a forgery.
Lviv was part of Poland until 1939. In May, the Justice Department disclosed that Poland’s Commission for Prosecution of Crimes Against the Polish Nation wanted U.S. prosecutors to interview Kalymon.
The commission’s questions are numerous: Where was the Jewish ghetto located in 1942? Who was the commander? Did Kalymon witness murders? If so, how many and who were the killers? Can he remember the names of other officers?
In Poland, prosecutor Grzegorz Malisiewicz said the commission was investigating
the role of Ukrainian police in the deaths of Jews.
“The crimes include murder of at least 39 Jews and attempted
murder of another 17 Jews, detaining and bringing to a gathering
point at least 3,458 Jews and convoying an unspecified number”
to a labor camp, Malisiewicz said.
He declined to say whether Poland wants to file charges against
Kalymon. A Justice Department spokeswoman, Laura Sweeney, said
she was not aware of other pending court cases in which the
government is helping Poland with a war crimes investigation.
Xenos, Kalymon’s lawyer, said he would ask U.S. District Judge
Marianne Battani to quash a subpoena for his client’s testimony.
If that fails, Kalymon has a right under Polish law to remain
silent.
Kalymon entered the United States in 1949 after being classified
as a “displaced person” following the war. He said he lied
about his police work because he feared being sent to the Soviet
Union.
Kalymon became a naturalized citizen in 1955 and worked as an
engineer at Chrysler. Xenos said he has an award from auto
icon Lee Iacocca on the wall of his ranch-style house.
Kalymon told the AP he has physical problems and can’t walk without
assistance. “I’m forgetting a lot of things. I let my lawyer
handle all this,” he said, declining further comment.
His wife said Kalymon has told her that his best friends in Europe
were Jews.
“They’re accusing him of murder — it’s not true,” said Luba Kalymon,
83. “Is he worried? Who wouldn’t be?”
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