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This digital image from the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the National Archives shows an immigration document for Elfriede Huth, later Elfriede Rinkel, when she was admitted to the U.S. in 1959. Rinkel admitted to being a Nazi concentration camp guard during World War II, but her past didn’t keep her from collecting nearly $120,000 in American Social Security benefits after she had been deported in 2006. (Immigration and Naturalization Service and the National Archives/Ancestry.com via AP)

This digital image from the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the National Archives shows an immigration document for Elfriede Huth, later Elfriede Rinkel, when she was admitted to the U.S. in 1959. Rinkel admitted to being a Nazi concentration camp guard during World War II, but her past didn’t keep her from collecting nearly $120,000 in American Social Security benefits after she had been deported in 2006. (Immigration and Naturalization Service and the National Archives/Ancestry.com via AP)

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