The man, known only as ‘Harry S.’ was allegedly stationed in the concentration camp – it is estimated that 65,000 people were killed during the Holocaust.
The court in Wuppertal, Germany, had to hear him “helped and supported” [the] murder [of] a few hundred [people]”Judge and spokesman Christian Lange told CNN.
But because of his inability to ‘conduct the defense in an understandable and comprehensible manner’, the trial will no longer take place, Lange said. However, the court ruled that he “should bear the expenses he incurred in the proceedings.”
Harry S. is accused of serving as a guard at the Nazi concentration camp between June 1944 and May 1945, near the Polish city now called Gdansk.
While the court there claims, there is ‘strong evidence’ that he guarded the transport of 598 prisoners to Auschwitz-Birkenau where 596 were killed in gas chambers.
The identities of the victims were not disclosed, but the prisoners of the camp historically included many Jews as well as non-Jewish Poles.
Lange told CNN that Harry S. was allegedly part of a group of 11 men guarding the transport of prisoners to Auschwitz.
Prosecutors did not name the woman, but said she was accused of assisting those responsible in the camp with the systematic killing of Jewish prisoners, Polish partisans and Soviet-Russian prisoners of war in her capacity as stenographer and secretary of the camp commander. “
In 2018, 94-year-old Johann Rehbogen is charged with being an SS guard in the Stutthof concentration camp in 1942 as a teenager.
Rehbogen, who appeared in a wheelchair in court, denied that he had committed the extent of the atrocities in a statement read out by his lawyer in court. The trial was suspended after Rehbogen was admitted to hospital with health problems, AFP reported.
The alleged victims included at least 100 Polish prisoners killed using poison gas Zyklon B, 77 Soviet prisoners of war killed in the summer of 1944. , “and executed several hundred Jewish prisoners because they were considered” unfit for work “.
CNN’s Nadine Schmidt and Atika Shubert contributed to this report.