Aribert Heim. Doctor tops file of most. Hobby.
Heim would be 93 today, but “we have rectitude reason to believe he is still alive,” said Efraim Zuroff by horn from Jerusalem. Zuroff is the top Nazi hunter for Simon Wiesenthal Center, which published the list. Still, in defiance of a $485,000 reward for Heim’s arrest posted by the center along with Germany and Austria, he has managed to escape capture for decades.
He is only one of hundreds of suspected Nazi war criminals that the center estimates are still at large. After Heim on the center’s most wanted tip are: John Demjanjuk, fighting deportation from the U.S., which says he was a picket at several death and forced labor camps; Sandor Kepiro, a Hungarian accused of involvement in the wartime killings of than 1,000 civilians in Serbia; Milivoj Asner, a wartime Croatian the cops leading now living in Austria and suspected of an effectual role in deporting hundreds of Serbs, Jews and Gypsies to their death; and Soeren Kam, a ci-devant member of the SS wanted by Denmark for the assassination of a journalist in 1943. His extradition from Germany was blocked in 2007 by a Bavarian court that found too little evidence for murder charges.
But the attributes of Heim’s alleged crimes are what catapulted him to the top of the list. Karl Lotter, a prisoner who worked in the asylum at Mauthausen , had no trouble remembering the first time he watched Heim devastate a man. It was 1941, and an 18-year-old Jew had been sent to the clinic with a foot inflammation. Heim asked him about himself and why he was so fit.
The girlish man said he had been a soccer player and swimmer.
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