LEAVING NOTHING TO CHANGE
IDENTIFICATION OF HIMMLER CURIOUS INCIDENT AT EXAMINATION (Rec. noon.) LONDON, May 27. While Himmler is lying in a nameless grave on Luneburg Heath his two aides—a burly colonel and a slightlybuilt major of the Waft'en S.S.— were flown in a British transport plane to tfield-Marsbal Montgomery's headquarters, states the ' Daily Express ' correspondent at Luneburg. With them went Himmler's personal belongings, his fingerprints, a cast of his lower jaw, a death mask, and also records of conversations with Himmler before his suicide. " The two S.S. officers do not know what is in the bags and parcels," said the correspondent. " They don't know that Himmler is dead and buried, and we don't know whether they, like Himmler, conceal in their mouths a tiny suicide phial which they will crush if we get too tough. We have not yet searched their mouths because first, if they have the iphials they will crush them and die on our handß without divulging perhaps vital information; secondly, if they have not got phials, they will know we have discovered Himmler's trick and that he is dead. They tried to loam about Himmler this morning when they asked for newspapers. These were given, but *<m\y of the day before Himmler's death. They have already been questioned, and will again be questioned at Field-Mar-shal Montgomery's headquarters. "Contact will bo also made with Himmler's widow and brother, who are both in Allied hands. Efforts are also being made to trace Himmler's dentist. Shaef does not want any mvstery cropping up later—it wants indisputable proof that it was Himmler who died. His identity has so far been established by Himmler saying he was Himmler, by his appearance, a comparison of his features witli photographs, his replies to trick questions, and, most important, his signature. " But here is a mystery. Himmler was asked, just before he took poison, to write his signature on a piece of paper. He responded without hesitation, and was about to hand the paper back when he suddenly tore it up into 48 pieces. British officers at the week-end pieced the paper together. It is now stated that the signature tallies with others in our hands, but why did Himmler, who had admitted identity, tear up the signature? Possibly he feared we might write something over it, such as a confession that he personally ordered the horrors at the Belsen and Buchenwald camps."
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 25495, 28 May 1945, Page 5
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400LEAVING NOTHING TO CHANGE Evening Star, Issue 25495, 28 May 1945, Page 5
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