31 August 2017

Argentina, maybe?

Rico says, no, it's not The Blue Meanie, but the real thing, according to an article by Matt Novak from Gizmodo:
Federal police in Argentina recently discovered a time capsule of evil, hidden inside a house near Buenos Aires. Roughly 75 Nazi artifacts, including everything from a large knife to Nazi medical devices to a photo negative of Adolf Hitler, were uncovered in a secret room. Police are investigating when and how the items entered the country.
As Haaretz reports, agents from Interpol raided the home of the unnamed owner of the Nazi artifacts on 8 June 2017. Some artworks of “illicit origin” were discovered on the north side of Buenos Aires, leading police to the man’s home. When investigators arrived they found a large bookcase hiding a secret room. The man remains free, but it’s unclear if he will face any charges.
The investigators have reached out to Holocaust experts to learn more about where the Nazi pieces may have come from, but members of the Jewish community in Argentina believe that they must have been brought to the country by Nazi officials following World War Two.
There was initially some speculation about whether the items could be reproductions, but investigators believe they’re originals. But there are obviously still a number of questions surrounding how they arrived in the country. “Our first investigations indicate that these are original pieces,” Argentine Security Minister Patricia Bullrich told The Associated Press late yesterday.
The discovery is the largest of its kind in Argentina, a country that has what might best be described as having an unfortunate relationship with the Holocaust. After World War Two, a number of top Nazi officials fled to Argentina, including Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele.
Eichmann was discovered in Bueno Aires by Nazi hunters in 1960. He was brought to Israel and tried and hanged in 1962. Mengele escaped Argentina and fled to Paraguay and later died in Brazil. It’s not yet known if any of the items discovered this month personally belonged to Eichmann, Mengele, or any other Nazis who escaped Germany.
One reason that authorities in Buenos Aires has some degree of certainty that they are originals is that some items from the collection are pictured in photographs with Nazi leaders. For example, one item in the collection is a magnifying glass. The same magnifying glass is seen in a photo negative from the collection showing Hitler himself. Investigators showed the photo to The Associated Press on the condition that the photo not be published.
“This is a way to commercialize them, showing that they were used by the horror, by the Führer. There are photos of him with the objects,” said Bullrich.
Some of the most disturbing items in the collection are medical devices, including items used to measure the size of human heads. Nazi scientists traveled the world in the 1930s measuring heads of different peoples, believing in a pseudo-science that superior races could be determined through facial features. The collection also includes Nazi toys and other things that would have been targeted to Nazi youth, such as a collection of harmonicas featuring illustrations of youngsters holding Nazi flags:
 
“There are no precedents for a find like this,” Nestor Roncaglia, head of Argentina’s Federal police, told The Associated Press. “Pieces are stolen or are imitations. But this is original and we have to get to the bottom of it.”
Correction: This post originally said that Mengele fled to Brazil and died in Paraguay. Mengele died in Brazil.
Rico says we can't seem to make these assholes go away...

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