Although not a good use of tax dollars, is this actually a good turn of events for Demjanjuk? It appears that his fate must now be decided by all members of the Board of Immigration Appeals.
Hopefully, they can aspire to the same level of jurisprudence of the Israeli Supreme Court when it found no plausible evidence of crimes committed by Demjanjuk in any camp.
Justice Levin went on to consider the arguments put forward by the Attorney-General. ..Similarly, it was not unreasonable to estimate that chances of convicting Demnajuk were small, particularly in view of the fact that none of the survivors of the Sobibor camp had identified him.
One would think (as did the Israeli Supreme Court) that a man that killed 29000 would have been identified by at least one camp survivor.