By Mike Wowk and Edward L. Cardenas /
The Detroit News
CLINTON TOWNSHIP -- Federal immigration agents Wednesday
arrested a Clinton Township man, once featured on "America's Most
Wanted," who they say had been an SS guard in a Nazi concentration camp
during World War II, and a fugitive for 16 years.
Fugitive Johann Leprich, 77, was stripped of his naturalized U.S.
citizenship in 1987 by a federal judge in Detroit, after his alleged
Nazi past came to light. In 1997, he was spotted in Canada and
authorities in the United States and Canada had sought to arrest him
since.
William Swor, who was Leprich's attorney in 1987, said he hasn't been
in contact with Leprich since his arrest.
Leprich was charged in May in a criminal complaint in U.S. District
Court with failing to register with the government.
His wife was believed to be living in the brown brick ranch on Capper
Street in Clinton Township where Leprich was arrested Wednesday.
"We know he renewed his Michigan driver's license (in the 1990s), but
we don't know where he's been living," said Greg Palmore, a spokesman
for the U.S. Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a branch of
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Palmore said Leprich was seen
in Canada recently.
Leprich said in a deposition in 1986 that he was a member of the
Waffen SS Death's Head Battalion, a Germany army unit that guarded
concentration camps during World War II. But he said he never heard
gunshots and never received orders to shoot prisoners trying to escape.
Leprich was a guard at the Mauthausen concentration camp, near Linz,
Austria, according to federal court documents. An estimated 150,000
prisoners died at Mauthausen before it was liberated by the U.S. Army in
1945.
Many prisoners were Jews; some were Soviet soldiers.
At a war crimes trial in 1946, 58 former Mauthausen camp guards were
sentenced to death.
Leprich told U.S. immigration officials in 1952, when he entered the
United States, that he had been a soldier in the Hungarian army, an ally
of the Germans. He became a U.S. citizen in 1958.
He was de-naturalized and ordered deported in 1987 because he had
lied about his past when he came to the United States, Palmore said.
Leprich, who is being held at an undisclosed location, now faces a
deportation hearing before a federal immigration judge in Detroit,
Palmore said.
You can reach Mike Wowk at (586) 468-0343 or mailto:mwowk@detnews.com