German prosecutors say they have located eight people who allegedly worked at the Nazis' Stutthof concentration camp, near the southern Polish town of Sztutowo during World War II and are considering whether they can be charged as accessories to murder, according to a Tuesday-afternoon story by the Associated Press. Some 65,000 people died at Stutthof.

Jens Rommel, the head of a special prosecutors' office that looks into Nazi war crimes, told the deutsche presse agentur news agency that four male suspects worked as guards and four women were secretaries or telephone operators. German prosecutors in recent years have pursued Nazi suspects under new legal reasoning that, even without evidence of a specific crime, they can be prosecuted if they helped camps operate.