World | John Demjanjuk Survivors Weep at Demjanjuk Trial Names of Sobibor victims read aloud in court By Nick McMaster Posted Dec 1, 2009 5:10 PM CST Copied Files concerning the trial against presumed former concentration camp guard John Demjanjuk, are seen in a court room in Munich, southern Germany, on Tuesday, Dec. 1, 2009. (AP Photo/Matthias Schrader, Pool) Survivors of Nazi concentration camps and relatives of victims shed tears today at the trial of accused guard John Demjanjuk. The plaintiffs heard a partial list of the 27,900 victims of the Sobibor death camp, where the prosecution alleges Demjanjuk worked. The defendant, strapped to a stretcher, held firm to his vow to not participate in the trial, opening his mouth only to pray to himself. Prosecutor Hans Lutz read a 10-page list of charges against the 89-year-old Ukranian, alleging that Demjanjuk "mercilessly and callously" aided the slaughter of Jews at the hands of the Nazis "because he himself wanted their deaths, believing, too, in the racist ideology behind it," the Guardian reports. Read These Next The 8 Democrats who bucked party on shutdown have something in common. Merchants could slap new surcharges on certain credit card purchases. Here's where things stand in the House ahead of shutdown vote. Trump is responding to MTG's increasing criticism of GOP. Report an error