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A Brief History of the Demjanjuk Case

February 10, 1961

The denaturalization trial of Demjanjuk begin in Cleveland.

June 23, 1961

Federal Court rules that Demjanjuk lied on his immigration papers and says Demjanjuk was Ivart the Terrible. His citizenship is revoked.

July 1962

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Demjanjuk and his three children begin a hunger strike. He falls to appear for a court date.

Fall 1963

Ryan leaves Osl to write a book, Quiet Neighbors. He will join Harvard's Office of the General Counsel in March of 1985.

October 1983

The state of Israel requests the extradition of Demjanjuk and asks that a warrant be issued for his arrest on the charge of murder.

May 1984

Demjanjuk is found deportable, but is given the option of going to the country of his choice if he leaves the U.S. Within 30 days. He does not leave.

February 27, 1986

His appeals exhausted, Demjanjuk is put on an El Al 747 and flown to Tel Aviv.

April 1988

Demjanjuk found guilty by Israel court and sentenced to death. He will eventually appeal all the way to the Israel Supreme Court where the case is still pending.

December 1991

Statement from Soviet Union seem to indicate Ivan the Terrible was another man, Ivan Marchenko. Ryan denies he know of the statements.

Januray 29, 1992

Ryan testifies before a federal judge probing Osl's prosecution of Demjanjuk.

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