The media reported that not far from the Argentine capital, the city of Buenos Aires, found a hiding place, which housed 75 artifacts of the Third Reich. Some of them probably used the Nazi leader himself.
On the basis of the court's decision, the representatives of Interpol entered the house on 8 June to the collector, who was living in the nature of Buenos Aires. Employees of the department drew attention to the bookshelf, after which, as it turned out, there was a passage to the secret room where Nazi artifacts were kept. In total, the experts found 75 objects: thus, it is a question of the largest Nazi collection in the history of Argentina.
Among other things, a bas-relief portrait of the Fuhrer, knives, an hourglass with a Nazi marking, an eagle statue on a swastika and a box of harmonics for children were found in the room. There were also magnifying glasses, which Hitler used: a photograph of the Fuhrer, who was looking at such a glass, was attached to the glasses. Special attention was paid to a very "original" device for measuring the head, which determines the person's belonging to the "Aryan" race.
Of course, it can not be ruled out that the discovered artifacts are counterfeits. But while experts adhere to a different point of view: preliminary studies have shown that we are talking about the original products. A number of devices the Fuhrer used to "intimidate" people. "There are photographs of him (Adolf Hitler, NS) with the devices," said Argentine Security Minister Patricia Bullrich.
Experts say that all the artifacts were probably brought to the South American country by prominent Nazi figures after the defeat of Germany in World War II. Perhaps they were brought by Josef Mengele himself, a doctor who conducted experiments on the prisoners of Auschwitz. Tens of thousands of people became victims of those inhuman experiences. Mengele successfully hid 35 years, and died in 1979 in Brazil from a stroke. Experts of the Israeli intelligence Mossad were close to capturing the killer doctor, but, according to her former employee Rafi Eitan, they decided not to take risks and focused on the capture of Adolf Eichmann, directly responsible for the "final solution of the Jewish issue" during the war.