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Mike Pasker

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however, his health was failing, having suffered a stroke and heart problems, and a Circuit Court judge declared him legally incompetent in late 1980. As a result, Pasker's deportation was never seriously pursued after that. Pasker succumbed, five days after his 92nd birthday, to cancer, Alzheimer's disease, and other ailments in 1993 in Florida.
137:. According to later eyewitness testimony, Paškevičius marched 100 Lithuanian Jews and killed them by shooting and/or hanging them in the Ukmergė forest in July 1941, and assisted in the murder of 12,000 other Jews during his time of service. Paškevičius fled to Germany in 1944. He moved to the United States in 1950 and settled in 182:
The Immigration and Naturalization Service initially served Pasker with a deportation hearing in Los Angeles in 1980, but Pasker had already left California by that time. After authorities tracked him down to Florida, he was served with another deportation hearing, this time in Miami. By then,
141:, Illinois. After moving to the United States, Paškevičius divorced his first wife, Ona, and remarried, to Hildegard Gertrud Kaese (1925–1980), whom he originally met in Germany. During his time in Chicago, Paškevičius worked as an electrician, and he changed his name to 164:
in 1979 after admitting to concealing his past as a Lithuanian police officer during his immigration. While living in Santa Monica, Pasker was the target of several assassination attempts by Jewish militant groups. In 1978, members of the
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picketed his condominium, and a gunman shot into his apartment on June 6. On December 6, 1979, his condominium was damaged by a car bomb. Pasker then moved to a different home in Santa Monica, before moving to
255: 134: 275: 270: 265: 160:. Based on these allegations, along with eyewitness testimony, the federal government filed suit in 1977 to revoke Pasker's citizenship, and he consented to 32: 260: 118:, September 26, 1901 – October 1, 1993) was a Lithuanian police officer who later immigrated to the United States and worked as an electrician. 250: 280: 201: 211: 47: 171: 90: 62: 152:
Pasker's Nazi past was first mentioned in a Lithuanian-language newspaper in Cleveland 1959. He was then mentioned by
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upon his naturalization as a United States citizen in 1962. Pasker and his wife retired to
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Alleged Nazi Collaborators in the United States after World War II
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in a 1960s radio broadcast, which resulted in an article in the
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Loss of United States citizenship by prior Nazi affiliation
43: 8: 48:introducing citations to additional sources 256:Deaths from Alzheimer's disease in Florida 206:. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 109. 276:Lithuanian refugees in the United States 174:, where his wife died on June 20, 1980. 38:Relevant discussion may be found on the 192: 7: 200:Schiessl, Christoph (3 March 2016). 129:, Paškevičius was a sergeant of the 271:Lithuanian Security Police officers 266:Holocaust perpetrators in Lithuania 135:Lithuania was under Nazi occupation 14: 31:relies largely or entirely on a 20: 261:Deaths from dementia in Florida 1: 251:Deaths from cancer in Florida 172:St. Petersburg Beach, Florida 302: 131:Lithuanian Security Police 281:Lithuanian mass murderers 223:– via Google Books. 133:from 1941 to 1944, while 147:Santa Monica, California 167:Jewish Defense League 178:Last years and death 44:improve this article 116:Mečys Paškevičius 109: 108: 94: 293: 225: 224: 222: 220: 197: 162:denaturalization 104: 101: 95: 93: 52: 24: 16: 301: 300: 296: 295: 294: 292: 291: 290: 231: 230: 229: 228: 218: 216: 214: 199: 198: 194: 189: 180: 158:Chicago Tribune 105: 99: 96: 53: 51: 37: 25: 12: 11: 5: 299: 297: 289: 288: 283: 278: 273: 268: 263: 258: 253: 248: 243: 233: 232: 227: 226: 212: 191: 190: 188: 185: 179: 176: 107: 106: 42:. Please help 28: 26: 19: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 298: 287: 284: 282: 279: 277: 274: 272: 269: 267: 264: 262: 259: 257: 254: 252: 249: 247: 244: 242: 239: 238: 236: 215: 213:9781498529419 209: 205: 204: 196: 193: 186: 184: 177: 175: 173: 168: 163: 159: 155: 150: 148: 144: 140: 136: 132: 128: 124: 119: 117: 113: 103: 92: 89: 85: 82: 78: 75: 71: 68: 64: 61: –  60: 59:"Mike Pasker" 56: 55:Find sources: 49: 45: 41: 35: 34: 33:single source 29:This article 27: 23: 18: 17: 217:. Retrieved 202: 195: 181: 151: 142: 120: 115: 111: 110: 100:January 2019 97: 87: 80: 73: 66: 54: 30: 246:1993 deaths 241:1901 births 143:Mike Pasker 112:Mike Pasker 235:Categories 219:15 January 187:References 70:newspapers 149:in 1972. 127:Lithuania 114:(born as 40:talk page 121:Born in 139:Chicago 123:Ukmergė 84:scholar 210:  86:  79:  72:  65:  57:  91:JSTOR 77:books 221:2019 208:ISBN 154:TASS 63:news 46:by 237:: 125:, 102:) 98:( 88:· 81:· 74:· 67:· 50:. 36:.

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single source
talk page
improve this article
introducing citations to additional sources
"Mike Pasker"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Ukmergė
Lithuania
Lithuanian Security Police
Lithuania was under Nazi occupation
Chicago
Santa Monica, California
TASS
Chicago Tribune
denaturalization
Jewish Defense League
St. Petersburg Beach, Florida
Alleged Nazi Collaborators in the United States after World War II
ISBN
9781498529419
Categories
1901 births
1993 deaths
Deaths from cancer in Florida
Deaths from Alzheimer's disease in Florida

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