Kozminski
quickly rose to Oberkapo, the
SS-appointed overseer of other
Jews, and walked around
Gross-Rosen in boots and a
heavy sweater, while other
Jews tried to survive the
winter in tattered
clothes. -- | New York, Monday, July 1, 2002
Controversial
Holocaust swindler to be subject of TV
news segment By Tom Tugend LOS
ANGELES, July 1 (JTA)
Lucian Ludwig Kozminski was - or
maybe is - a man convicted of swindling
some 3,000 of his fellow Holocaust
survivors. He did time in federal prison,
and died, according to his death
certificate, on Jan. 19, 1993 in Los
Angeles County. Ordinarily, this would be
the end of the sordid tale of a man who
preyed on his own people. Instead, it is
only the beginning of a mystery, full of
intrigue and skullduggery, which Dateline
NBC will telecast on Sunday. It is also the story of Mark
Kalmansohn, a Los Angeles lawyer and
former federal prosecutor, who for 20
years has sought to bring Kozminski to
justice. Even today, Kalmansohn is not
sure whether the man nicknamed the
"Schwindler" (German for swindler) by
Holocaust survivors and "The Weasel" by
federal officials is dead or alive. Even Kozminski's birth date and age are
in dispute, but apparently he was in his
early teens when the German army invaded
Poland in 1939. In short order, the Nazis
killed Kozminski's parents, two sisters
and a brother. Kozminski himself was sent
first to the Lodz Ghetto and then to
various concentration camps, including
Auschwitz and Gross-Rosen. Despite his youth, Kozminski
quickly rose to
Oberkapo, the SS-appointed overseer
of other Jews, and, according to survivor
testimony at his trial, walked around
Gross-Rosen in boots and a heavy sweater,
while other Jews tried to survive the
winter in tattered clothes. After the war, Kozminski settled near
Munich, and between 1963 and 1967 was
convicted of six crimes, including
smuggling, bribing of officials, and
running a scam involving the refurbishing
of graves of Polish Holocaust victims. Nevertheless,
Kozminski managed to enter the United
States on a visitor's visa, settled in
a Jewish area of Los Angeles, and in
1969 advertised his services in Jewish
newspapers as a "reparations
counselor," who could obtain
restitution money due Holocaust
survivors from the German
government. During the next decade, according to
court records at his 1982 trial, Kozminski
swindled some 3,000 of his clients,
charging exorbitant up-front and service
fees and pocketing the German checks
intended for the survivors. Kalmansohn, who as assistant U.S.
attorney prosecuted Kozminski, estimates
that the survivor accumulated $1 million,
which, with inflation and interest, would
be worth $10 million today. Two of Kozminski's victims, still
living in the Los Angeles area, are
Jacob Weingarten, a retired house
painter, and Modka "Max" Wolman, a
retired television repair shop owner. They took their complaints to federal
authorities and the criminal case was
assigned to Kalmansohn in 1982. After he
and Postal Inspector Lou Kinzler
obtained grand jury indictments, Kozminski
pleaded guilty to eight counts of mail and
bankruptcy fraud and was sentenced to 12
years in federal prison. Bureau of Prisons records show that
Kozminski was released in 1989, even
though he was spotted walking a street in
Beverly Hills in 1987. The trail appeared to be at an end when
a death certificate, bearing
Kozminskiís name, was filed in Los
Angeles County in early 1993, and the
authorities closed the case.
KALMANSOHN was by then in private
practice, but his obsession with the case
had only intensified after meeting with
Holocaust survivors in Israel. He decided
to scrutinize the death certificate, and
found that it listed someone else's Social
Security number, the description of the
body in no way matched Kozminskiís
actual appearance, and the purported age
at death was off by 10 years. In addition, someone cashed Social
Security checks in Kozminski's name for 26
months after his 'death,' and there were
continuous reports that he had been
sighted, most recently only two years
ago. On the basis of this evidence, and in
the belief that Kozminski could have faked
his death to avoid paying survivors their
rightful money, Kalmansohn filed civil
suits against Kozminski on behalf of
Weingarten and Wolman. In 1999, Judge
John Ouderkirk ruled that
Kozminski's death certificate was 'false
and/or fraudulent' and that "Defendant
Kozminski may be alive today at an unknown
location." A year later, a second judge concurred
in the earlier finding. Kalmansohn, now an entertainment and
intellectual property lawyer in Century
City, Calif., continues to be haunted by
the case. He deals with it in a 440-page
book, "Nothing Is Too Late," which he
expects to be published by next year, and
he hopes that the interest generated by
the NBC program might lead to further
clues about the elusive Kozminski. "I really don't know whether Kozminski,
who would now be 76 to 78 years old, is
dead or alive," says Kalmansohn. "To cite
Winston Churchill's observation on Russia,
the case remains 'a riddle wrapped in a
mystery inside an enigma.' " Related
items on this website:- How
to survive a Holocaust: Obituary of
Avraham Tory,
another Capo
- Index
to origins of anti-Semitism
- Index
to Binjamin
Wilkomirski,
another phoney survivor
Survey
in The Independent: One
in Three Europeans is Now
anti-Jewish One in five
Britons: "Jews have too much power in the
business world." More than 10 per cent:
Jews are "more willing to use shady
practices". One in ten: "Jews don't care
what happens to anyone but their own kind"
while one in three considers "Jews are
more loyal to Israel than to this
country." Board
of Deputies of British
Jews:
"These findings are shocking." |