Attorney Mark O'connor with his client, alleged Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk-aka Ivan the Terrible as Treblinka guard-in courtroom at Ayalon Prison, on trial for crimes against Jewish people. It was April 1987, upwardof two months after the trial had begun. Demjanjuk, who emigrated to the United States after World War II, was stripped of his U.S. citizenship and extradited to Israel last year to face a possible death penalty for crimes against humanity and against the Jewish people. You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times. His application for asylum was denied on 31 May 1984. A rift had developed between chief counsel Mark OConnor, a Buffalo, New York lawyer, and Yoram Sheftel, a flamboyant Israeli defense attorney, who had been brought on as co-counsel by the Demjanjuk family to help their legal team traverse the Israeli courts system. Demjanjuk was a gentle old man whod bounce OConnors 3-year-old daughter on his knee, smiling and talking nonsense. I was the most hated man in the country, more than my client, Sheftel said, Arutz Sheva, an Israeli media network,reported in 2012, after Demjanjuks death. And then the Israeli acted as family enforcer to make sure that Demjanjuk complied even though it was against his former clients better judgment, the letter added. In August 1977, the Justice Department submitted a request to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio to revoke Demjanjuk's citizenship, based on his concealment on his 1951 immigration application of having worked at Nazi death camps. In 2017, Sheftel represented Elor Azaria, the young Israeli soldier whofatally shotan unarmed Palestinian man as he laid helpless on the ground during a 2016 skirmish in the West Bank, the New York Times reported. He faced death by hanging, but unfazed by that looming prospect, Demjanjuk, accused of operating extermination camp gas chambers, dismantled and reassembled his legal team days before one of the trials most crucial phases. On November 18, 1983 the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio, acting for and in behalf of the government of Israel, filed a complaint requesting that this Court conduct a hearing to determine whether John Demjanjuk is extraditable to Israel . Demjanjuk Mark O'Connor, . He'll be convicted, and everyone will say you defended a monster, his mother supposedly said, the New York Timesreported in 1987. //