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Where can I find that book? It’s nowhere to be seen, nor is the original German text. I searched through Yandex, Archive.org, and Anna.org. A Finnish PDF is the only thing available. The author is a Tunisian nurse who took care of the elderly Hess for the last five years of his life and claims to have witness his murder obv he didn't killed himself.
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749lr on scored.co
1 year ago 1 point (+0 / -0 / +1Score on mirror ) 1 child
Ive not read about Himmler's death, but you're kinda right about R. Hess, there was a nigger who acted as an accomplice, I've found some blogs with some excerpts from the book. In short he got killed by the British government.

"After arriving on the scene, my first impression was that a struggle had just taken place. This was where someone suffering from numerous infirmities and without much strength left in his body must have, in sheer panic, desperately yet unsuccessfully tried to defend himself. Looking at the people standing in the room, I then saw whom he had tried to defend himself against.

The victim was lying on his back with his hands and legs stretched out on the ground almost in the middle of the small room which measured about 70 square feet. Lifeless. Dead. The colored American guard, Tony Jordan, was standing near the feet of the dead body. He appeared overwrought and stressed, extremely nervous and sweating so heavily that his shirt was saturated with sweat and sweat was running down his face.

He was also not wearing a tie, a clear violation of the Spandau Prison military dress code. It was then that I first noticed the other two people who were standing next to Hess. I was now bent over my patient and I looked up from below at the two men in uniform. They both gave me icy stares and then, looking at Jordan several times with questioning glances, seemed to be asking, “What is he doing here?”

There was one large and one small man, both of whom were wearing American uniforms. But were they really Americans? Guards wearing the uniforms of the four custodial Allied governments were not allowed to enter the inner area of the prison. Soldiers were even categorically forbidden to approach the prisoner."

https://www.maier-files.com/rudolf-hess-his-betrayal-and-murder/
https://www.críticamodernidad.com/2017/06/la-muerte-de-rudolf-hess-yo-mire-sus.html
SFAM1A on scored.co
1 year ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
Yeah, that's the one I was thinking of
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