OPINION
American citizenship is “precious,” and revoking it “can have severe and unsettling consequences.”
Fedorenko v. United States,
John Kalymon entered the United States after World War II as a permanent resident and later gained citizenship. In 2004, the Government sought to revoke his citizenship, alleging that his activities during the war made him ineligible for entry. After a bench trial, the district court held that the Government proved by clear, convincing, and unequivocal evidence that Ka-lymon persecuted Jews during the war, advocated or acquiesced in conduct contrary to civilization and human decency, and misrepresented a material fact on his visa application. The district court revoked Kalymon’s citizenship.
On appeal, Kalymon raises several claims of error, including mistaken identity and various evidentiary errors by the district court. For the following reasons, we affirm.
*628 I
A. Nazi-Germany’s Occupation of the City of L’viv
In 1941, Nazi-Germany invaded the European part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, including the city of L’viv (in what is now the Ukraine), to implement its vision of a new racial order. L’viv became part of District Galacia, an administrative unit of the General Government created by Nazi-Germany during World War II. The General Government was a German-run government set up to rule parts of Poland and the Ukraine.
The Nazi-Germans enacted a set of racially motivated policies against civilian populations under their control, particularly Jewish populations. The district court summarized the persecutory measures Nazi-Germany enforced against the Jews in District Galacia, particularly in L’viv:
Nazi persecutory policy toward the Jews in District Galicia included 1) confining all Jews in ghettos and issuing new identification papers that identified them as Jews; 2) forcibly removing Jews from the ghetto for subsequent murder either by shooting or gassing; and 3) sparing a limited number of Jews whom the Germans considered “work capable” until they were transferred to forced labor camps where many died from starvation, disease and other inhumane conditions.
United States v. Kalymon,
No. 04-60003,
B. The Ukrainian Auxiliary Police
The occupying German Reich established the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police (“UAP”) in L’viv to maintain public order and to assist with constabulary police functions. The UAP was subordinate to the German Order Police, the general German police force, separate from both the German Security Police (ordinary criminal police) and the German Gestapo (secret state police). The UAP was divided into “commissariats.” Each commissariat was responsible for a geographic section of the city. UAP members were recruited, but they were never drafted or required to serve. Each UAP member had a personnel file, was given uniforms, armed, paid a salary, and received other benefits such as food and firewood.
Candidates took oaths of loyalty to the German administration. Dr. Dieter Pohl, an expert historian, testified that Nazi ideological training (including instruction about the German Reich, Adolf Hitler, racial structure, and the Jewish people) was required for all UAP personnel. Training also included marching, exercise, and German language instruction. An oath of allegiance to the occupying German Reich was, likewise, required for most positions in the UAP.
Strict rules governed the issuing of firearms and ammunition. UAP policemen were trained in the use of firearms. Each UAP commissariat maintained a register that could be used to verify the issuance and return of firearms and munitions as well as the use of any munitions. One firearm was assigned to each pair of policemen during a shift, and duty officers returned the assigned firearms to the commissariat at the end of their shift. Notes were recorded in the register confirming that firearms and munitions were clean and fully transferred. Ammunition was, likewise, tightly regulated due to concerns over its supplies.
The UAP routinely enforced persecutory measures against the Jewish population, including control of the black market, mandatory armbands, curfews, and cleanliness violations. Documents indicated that UAP members also performed “extraordinary” duties with regard to the Jewish ghetto.
*629
These duties included participating in sweeps to reduce the Jewish ghetto population, manning cordon posts around the city to prevent Jews from escape, escorting and guarding Jews at and between assembly points, and searching for Jews attempting to hide or escape. In addition, the district court identified at least five distinct operations during which UAP members rounded up the Jewish population for transportation to a forced labor camp, deportation, or extermination.
Ka-lymon,
C. Kalymon’s UAP Service
Kalymon was born “Jan Kalymun” in Poland in 1921. In 1939, he moved to Bomblitz, Germany. In late 1941, Kaly-mon moved to L’viv, where he applied for and was hired as a police private in the UAP.
Kalymon admitted that he served in several UAP commissariats from at least May 1942 to March 1944. He testified that his duties in the UAP consisted of being a peacekeeper. He claimed never to have possessed or fired a firearm while on duty. Moreover, Kalymon asserted that he had no contact with or knowledge of the Jewish population in L’viv.
The Government relied upon several wartime documents to show that Kalymon was more involved in persecuting civilians, especially Jews, than he claimed. Several of these documents identified “Ivan,” “Iwan,” or “Jan” “Kalymon” or “Kalymun” as a UAP policeman. Defendant admitted that “Ivan” was essentially the equivalent of “Iwan” and “Jan.” Dr. Pohl testified that German documents would account for the use of “Iwan,” whereas in Cyrillic the name would be “Ivan” and in Polish the name would be “Jan.” Defendant also admitted that he has used two spellings of his surname (“Kalymon” and “Kalymun”) during various times of his life. While his birth record indicated his surname as “Ka-lymun,” Defendant testified that he used “Kalymon” exclusively after 1941. According to the district court, the “Kalymon” spelling appears in many of the more innocuous documents (e.g., salary declaration, list of policemen receiving uniform fabric, driver’s license).
Kalymon,
Defendant testified that he did not know of any other UAP officers using the name “Kalymon” or “Kalymun” while serving in the UAP. Nonetheless, records indicated that there were three individuals with the name “Kalymon” — Roman, Stefan, and Ivan. However, there is no evidence showing that any other person served in the UAP with a surname spelled “Kalymun.” One document admitted as evidence that used the spelling “Kalymun” contained Defendant’s admitted date and place of birth. Moreover, Defendant admitted to serving in the Fourth, Fifth, and Seventh Commissariats in L’viv during the same time period that a person bearing the name “Ivan/Iwan” “Kalymun/Kalymon” served in these same units. In summary, the district court explained that the record showed no other person “bearing the name ‘Ivan/Iwan’ ‘Kalymun/Kalymon,’ with the same date and place of birth as Defendant, served in the UAP between May 1942 and March 1944, in the same commissariats as Defendant.” Id.
While Kalymon testified that he did not participate in the rounding up or in the transportation of Jews from the ghetto, the district court noted that several documents countered his assertion. Documents indicated that “[o]n May 6, 1942, Iv Kalymun generated a cleanliness inspec *630 tion report, in which he reported nonconforming properties.” Id. at *11. Additionally, “[o]n May 11, 1942, Ivan Kalymun and another policeman were assigned to escort an unknown number of Jews to Pluvhov, the location of a SS-run, forced labor camp” and each expended six rounds of ammunition. Id. A report dated August 14, 1942, indicated that “Iv Kalymun recorded that he fired four shots while on duty,” wounding one Jew and killing another. Id. Further, the chief of the commissariat filed a summary report on the same date indicating that policemen “delivered 2,128 Jews to a central assembly point.” Id. The report stated that twelve Jews were “killed while escaping,” seven Jews were wounded, and that “Ivan Kaly-mun” expended four rounds of ammunition. Id. Additionally, on August 20, 1942, “Kalymun” fired two rounds of ammunition used during operations where 525 Jews were delivered to an assembly point; fourteen Jews were shot and killed and six were wounded. Id. at * 12. The following day, “Ivan Kalymun” shot two rounds of ammunition in an operation where policemen rounded up and delivered an additional 805 Jews. Id. In June 1943, Kalymon’s commissariat participated “in the liquidation of the Jewish ghetto” where Jews were shot or sent to forced labor camps. Id. From November 19 through 23, 1943, all UAP members in L’viv, including those in Kalymon’s commissariat, participated in massive search operations to locate and to turn over any remaining Jews in the ghetto to German authorities. Id. UAP members patrolled the streets and manned roadblocks to screen all those who exited the city. Id.
In 1944, Kalymon married. Sometime after March 1944, he resigned from the UAP.
D. Immigration to the United States
In March 1949, Kalymon requested that the United States Displaced Persons Committee (“DPC”) qualify him as a “displaced person” under the Displaced Persons Act of 1948, Pub.L. No. 80-774, ch. 647, 62 Stat. 1009 (“DPA”), so that he would be eligible to immigrate to the United States. On his application, Kalymon stated that he was employed in Kavanca, Poland from 1939 until 1943 and that from 1943 to 1944 he attended vocational school in Lwow, Poland. Based upon the information that Kalymon submitted, the DPC declared him an eligible displaced person.
Kalymon subsequently applied for a visa in April 1949 to enter the United States. In his application, Kalymon stated that he resided in Komantscha, Poland from 1939 to August 1943 and in Lemberg, Poland from 1943 to 1944. He listed his occupation as “shop assistant,” but made no mention of his service in the UAP. He later explained that he lied because he was fearful of being repatriated to the Soviet Union.
Regarding the absence of any information about Kalymon’s past involvement in the UAP, Mario DeCapua, then-head of the Security Investigations Division of the DPC, testified that although the UAP was not on the Inimical List (a list of organizations whose members were ineligible under the DPA), membership in organizations not named on the list could be a disqualifying factor under the DPA. DeCapua also testified that any wartime activities were to be noted in a report to the DPC. Likewise, William Arket, a former United States Army Counterintelligence Corps agent who investigated Kalymon’s background, testified that had Kalymon reported his wartime service in the UAP, it would have been reported because employment in a police force in Nazi-occupied territory was considered a negative factor. Finally, Kenneth Smith, former United *631 States Department of State Vice Consul, testified that information that an applicant had served in a police force in an area occupied by Nazi forces, if known to the Vice Consul, would have tended to affect the decision regarding eligibility.
Based on the information that Kalymon supplied to authorities, the United States Consulate in Munich, Germany issued him a visa under the DPA. In May 1949, Kaly-mon used his visa to enter the United States. After petitioning for naturalization in September 1955, Kalymon received a certificate of naturalization on October 11,1955.
E. The Government Brought Denatu-ralization Proceedings Against Ka-lymon
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the United States gained access to previously unaccessible World War II-era archives. Among these archives were records implicating a number of immigrants to the United States who had hid their Axis military service or activities assisting the Axis powers. Government investigators eventually uncovered records that called into question Kalymon’s entry into the United States as a displaced person under the DPA.
In 2004, the Government filed a civil complaint against Kalymon seeking to revoke his citizenship and to cancel his certificate of naturalization. The Government brought four claims against him, any one of which would have been a sufficient ground for relief. In Count I, the Government contended that Kalymon’s service in the UAP amounted to assistance in the persecution of civilians, rendering him ineligible for a visa under § 2(b) of the DPA. In Count II, the Government alleged that Kalymon’s service constituted membership or participation in a movement hostile to the United States, rendering him ineligible for a visa under § 13 of the DPA. Next, in Count III, the Government maintained that he willfully misrepresented his wartime service in the UAP to obtain a visa, rendering him ineligible for a visa under § 10 of the DPA. And, finally, in Count IV, the Government asserted that his service in the UAP constituted the advocation or acquiescence in activities or conduct contrary to civilization and human decency, in violation of then-existing State Department regulations governing visas.
The district court held a bench trial and later issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The district court found that Kalymon’s service in the UAP, including the extraordinary duties he performed against Jews, amounted to persecution as well as conduct contrary to human decency.
Kalymon,
Kalymon appealed.
II
A. Standard of Review
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52, we “must- not ... set aside” the district
*632
court’s findings of fact “unless clearly erroneous.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a)(6). We must also “give due regard to the trial court’s opportunity to judge the witnesses’ credibility.”
Id.
“Where there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous. This is so even when the district court’s findings do not rest on credibility determinations, but are based instead on physical or documentary evidence or inferences from other facts.”
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City,
As for the district court’s legal conclusions, we review those de novo.
Pressman v. Franklin Nat’l Bank,
B. P112
Before reaching the merits of the district court’s analysis, we briefly address two claims of error over the admission of a particular document labeled “P112.” Briefly, PI 12 is a hand-written note, dated August 14, 1942, in which “Iv Kalymun” recorded that he fired four shots while on duty during the Jewish operation that day. One person was wounded and one was killed. The district court attributed the document, among others, to Kalymon. On appeal, he argues that the district court should have received expert handwriting analysis in order to authenticate the handwriting, rather than rely on its own handwriting comparison. He also argues that the document should not have been admitted as an ancient document in the first place. We review the district court’s rulings regarding the admissibility of documents for an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Firishchak,
In general, expert opinion on handwriting is not necessary for authentication under Federal Rule of Evidence 901.
United States v. Saadey,
As Kalymon concedes on appeal, his signature on his L’viv driver’s license, admitted as evidence, served as a viable authenticating exemplar. The district court heard testimony from Dr. Antonio Cantu, an ink and paper examiner, and from Dr. Pohl explaining that P112 was an authentic wartime document. The district court explained that it attributed P112 and several other documents to Kalymon because of the absence of anyone with a similar sounding name who served in the UAP at the same time, and because some of the documents using the spelling “Kaly-mun” bore Kalymon’s admitted date and place of birth.
Kalymon,
Next, in his reply brief, Kalymon argues for the first time that PI 12 should not have been admitted under the hearsay exception for ancient documents. Issues raised for the first time in a reply brief are considered waived on appeal.
United States v. Demjanjuk,
Kalymon admits that there is sufficient evidence that P112 is an authentic World War II record. Rather, he argues, again, that there is no proof he signed it. Yet, whether or not the signature was his is a question that goes to the content of the document, not whether the document is what it purports to be — i.e., a wartime record. The district court did not err in admitting PI 12.
C. Denaturalization
1. Proceedings in General
■ As explained above, Kalymon is a naturalized citizen. Under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, if a person “illegally procured” his citizenship or otherwise procured it “by concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation,” then the person’s citizenship must be revoked. 8 U.S.C. § 1451(a). “[T]here must be strict compliance with all the con-gressionally imposed prerequisites to the acquisition of citizenship. Failure to comply with any of these conditions renders the certificate of citizenship ‘illegally procured’ and naturalization that is unlawfully procured can be set aside.”
Fedorenko,
2. Persecution and Conduct Contrary to Civilization and Human Decency
One of the prerequisites to becoming a naturalized citizen is lawful admission into the United States pursuant to a valid visa.
United States v. Dailide,
One class of persons who was automatically excluded from the definition of “displaced persons” was anyone who “ ‘assisted the enemy in persecuting civil[ians]’ ” or who “had ‘voluntarily assisted the enemy forces ... in their operations.’ ”
Id.
at 495,
In addition, State Department regulations precluded the issuance of a visa to any person who “advocated or acquiesced in activities or conduct contrary to civilization and human decency.” 22 C.F.R. § 53.33Q) (1949). Mere membership in an organization was, again, usually not enough.
United States v. Koreh,
As the district court correctly noted, Kalymon’s participation in general police duties did not constitute assistance in the persecution of civilians.
Kalymon,
Kalymon does not dispute that these duties and acts would amount to persecution excluding the actor from the definition of a displaced person.
See United States v. Sokolov,
Due process “does not require ideal accuracy” of spelling, “even in names.”
Grannis v. Ordean,
It is undisputed that the wartime documents recording these persecutory acts attributed them to “Kalymun,” which is phonetically identical to' Defendant’s admitted surname. Moreover, Defendant admitted to using both spellings (“Kaly-mon” and “Kalymun”) during his lifetime. “Iv” clearly could be an abbreviation for “Ivan.” While Defendant testified that he never used that abbreviation, whether to accept his assertion was a matter of credibility for the district court to decide.
Anderson,
Given the linguistic identity between the first names, the phonetic identity between the surnames, and the absence of any other “Ivan/Iwan/Jan” “Kalymon/Kalymun” combination, with the same date of birth and birthplace serving in the UAP at that time, the district court did not clearly err in concluding that Defendant was the individual identified in the wartime records who committed the recorded persecutory acts. The district court’s finding was sufficient to revoke Kalymon’s citizenship under either Count I (not a displaced person under the DPA) or Count IV (advocating or acquiescing in conduct contrary to civilization and human decency, in violation of visa regulations). Accordingly, we affirm the district court on these counts.
3. Import of Kalymon’s Admitted Misrepresentation About his Work Experience
Section 10 of the DPA provides that any person who made “a misrepresentation for the purpose of gaining admission into the United States as an eligible displaced person shall thereafter not be admissible into the United States.” DPA § 10, 62 Stat. 1013. However, this provision applies only to willful misrepresentations of material facts.
Fedorenko,
Although Kalymon concedes that he willfully misrepresented his UAP employment, he argues that the misrepresentation was not material. He attacks the district court’s finding of materiality on two grounds: (a) the logical impossibility of finding that a person made a material misrepresentation about his service during World War II while at the same time finding that the service was not as a member of a hostile movement against the United States; and (b) the admission of certain expert testimony and reports concerning materiality was reversible error. Both grounds are taken up in turn.
Kalymon contends that the district court could not logically find both that the Government failed to meet its burden to show that the UAP was a hostile movement under Section 13 of the DPA and that his lying about his service in the UAP was material. There is, however, no logi
*636
cal or legal incongruity in the district court’s findings. Whether the UAP as an organization was hostile to the United States is a different question than whether Kalymon’s misrepresentation about his own activities during the war would have had a natural tendency to influence, or was capable of influencing, the decision of immigration officials. For example, a person could persecute someone without being a member of a hostile movement; if it were otherwise, the latter class would subsume the former, making § 2 of the DPA superfluous. As discussed above, persecution itself can make one ineligible to be a displaced person under the DPA. Thus, one could be precluded from gaining a visa solely because he persecuted against Jews even if he did not belong to a hostile movement. Lying about his persecutory actions would, therefore, be lying about something that would preclude him from gaining a visa, i.e., a material fact.
Fedor-enko,
The district court correctly found that Kalymon’s wartime activities, including his service in the UAP and his activities as a UAP member, were material facts. Had the investigating officials known about his service and at least some of his general duties in the UAP, they would have investigated further, as several of the Government’s experts indicated. In doing so, they might have learned about his extraordinary activities, including rounding up and shooting Jews, killing at least one of them. Had they learned of these activities, Kalymon would not have received a visa. Thus, the information Kalymon kept from the investigating officials clearly was capable of at least influencing the officials’ investigation and ultimate decision to grant him a visa.
But, Kalymon argues, the Government’s experts on DPA investigations and procedures should have been disqualified from testifying. He asserts in particular that three witnesses failed to meet the reliability threshold for expert testimony because they were admittedly not experts of Eastern European or Ukrainian political history or experts of the UAP.
Fed.R.Evid. 702 states,
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1) the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
We apply an abuse-of-discretion standard when reviewing a district court’s decision to admit or exclude expert testimony.
Kumho Tire Co., Ltd. v. Carmichael,
In the first place, it is questionable to what extent the district court relied upon the immigration witnesses’ testimony to reach its legal conclusion that Kalymon’s misrepresentations were material. The district court did not cite or discuss their testimony in its analysis of materiality.
See Kalymon,
Furthermore, the Government did not offer the three immigration witnesses as historical experts about World War II in general or wartime Eastern Europe, the Ukraine, or the UAP. (Kalymon raises no claim of error on appeal with regard to the Government’s historical expert, Dr. Pohl.) Nor did the Government offer their testimony to prove that Kalymon, in fact, engaged in the various wartime activities alleged in the complaint. “[EJxperts may base their testimony upon information not within their personal knowledge or observation.”
Dailide,
As to the reports of the three experts, Kalymon argues that the district court should have rejected them because, in Kalymon’s view, the substantive content of the reports was almost entirely the product of the Government. For support, he cites to testimony in which the experts explain that they told Government counsel their substantive opinions, and then counsel reduced those opinions to writing for the experts’ review and signature. Contrary to Kalymon’s contention, there is nothing inherently nefarious in this. All that the rules require is that an expert submit a written report signed and pre
*638
pared by the witness, and that “ ‘[t]he report shall contain a complete statement of all opinions to be expressed and the basis and reasons therefor.’ ”
Dailide,
Rule 26(a)(2)(B) does not preclude counsel from providing assistance to experts in preparing the reports.... Nevertheless, the report, which is intended to set forth the substance of the direct examination, should be written in a manner that reflects the testimony to be given by the witness and it must be signed by the witness.
A party’s attorney can reduce an expert’s oral opinion to writing so long as the report reflects the actual views of the expert.
Thus, there being no legal error in finding “material” a misrepresentation about wartime activities as part of a police force not otherwise determined to be a hostile movement against the United States, and there being no abuse of discretion in admitting the expert witness testimony and reports about the DPA procedures, we affirm the district court on Count III as well.
Ill
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the district court on Counts I, III, and IV of the Government’s complaint against Kalymon.
