RESEARCHER'S FIND SIGNS U.S. KNEW OF MENGELE'S POSTWAR HIDEOUT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200025-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 6, 2010
Sequence Number: 
25
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 13, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200025-6.pdf75.94 KB
Body: 
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/06: CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200025-6 ARTICLE AFFEARED ON PAGE / - C WASHINGTON POST 13 March 1985 Researchers Find Signs U.S. Knew By Jay Mathews Washington Pat Staff Wnter LOS ANGELES, March 14-Research- ers here have uncovered evidence indicat- ing that U.S. officials knew of a postwar German hideaway used by accused Nazi war criminal Dr. Josef Mengele but failed to alert authorities. Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center here, said a West Ger- man government prosecutor acting on the new information has located a cottage in the Bavarian town of Autenried rented by Men- gele's wife from 1945 to 1949. Two U.S. Army intelligence index cards, discovered in a pile of Army documents ac- quired by the center, list Autenried as Men- gele's residence. The cards provide the lat- est in a chain of clues indicating a link be- tween postwar U.S. officials and the man charged with killing thousands of people at the Auschwitz death camp. A U.S. Army spokesman refused to com- ment today, saying that neither Army nor Justice Department investigators had seen the new evidence. Rabbi Abraham Cooper, assistant dean of the center, said the West German prosecu- tor in Frankfurt heading the search for the fugitive Mengele "went crazy" when told of the Autenried connection. No information previously available to investigators had mentioned the town, about seven miles from Mengele's birthplace at Gunzberg. Hier said the prosecutor told him by tele- phone this morning that investigators were combing the town for people who might remember the infamous Nazi physician who allegedly conducted painful and lethal ex- periments on Jewish children, particularly twins, at Auschwitz. The center recently has released state- ments from two former U.S. Army person- nel who say they believe that they saw Mengele in U.S. custody or heard reliable reports that he had been arrested by U.S. authorities in the two years after World War II. Mengele, who would be 73 if he is alive, is thought to be hiding in Paraguay. He was first seen in South America in 1949. Inves- tigators have been unable to discover how of Mengele's Postwar Hideout he escaped capture after the war or how he managed to leave Germany undetected. Based on the discovery in U.S. files of the Autenried references and the confirmation "It is difficult to understand how American intelligence came to know a specific address ... as the permanent address of Dr. Josef Mengele." -Rabbi Marvin Hier of a Mengele connection with the town, "the conclusion that we are heading for is that the Army knew he was there but did not reveal it," Cooper said. Center leaders have suggested that U.S. officials may have pro- tected Mengele, as they protected a few other former Nazi officers, in exchange for intelligence on Soviet activities in Germany. In a letter sent Monday to Lt. Gen. Wil- liam Odom, assistant Army chief of staff for intelligence, Hier asked for an investigation of the source of the information on the two cards. One card is undated, with the word Autenried penned in; the other is dated Dec. 5, 1960, with the place typed in. The undated card also contains what appears to be an address, "Kayausbach," which has been crossed out. Hier said he initially thought that the in- formation had come from fragebogen, the questionnaires that Mengele's relatives and other former Nazi Party members were STAT COfl UQd Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/06: CIA-RDP90-00552R000404200025-6