Jerome Corsi also has a conspiracy concerning his escape to Argentina. Corsi believes that, “with help from Hitler’s private secretary Martin Bormann, Argentinian politician Juan Peron, and future CIA director Allen Dulles – who, Corsi insinuates, was motivated by a sinister internationalist agenda – Hitler and his bride escaped to Argentina” (Nelson). Also, in 2017, seventy five Nazi objects such as, “a bust relief of Adolf Hitler, magnifying glasses inside elegant boxes with swastikas and even a macabre medical device used to measure head size” (“Massive Trove of Hidden ‘Original’ Nazi Artifacts Found in Argentina”). These objects were found behind a bookshelf that led to a passageway in the wall that held all the artifacts (Rey). Some of the artifacts found also had pictures of Hitler holding some of the objects in the Argentinian house. One last conspiracy dealing with Hitler’s suicide is the skull that the Russians had. It is well established that after recovering Hitler’s body, the Soviets took the already burned remains to Moscow, and apparently incinerated them (Nelson). After some time, researchers at the University of Connecticut tested that those statements were true (Nelson). They tested the believed to be skull of Hitler, and their results turned out different (Nelson). Their results were that the skull was actually a woman’s skull between the age of 20 and 40, so they believed that this was not Hitler’s skull
Jerome Corsi also has a conspiracy concerning his escape to Argentina. Corsi believes that, “with help from Hitler’s private secretary Martin Bormann, Argentinian politician Juan Peron, and future CIA director Allen Dulles – who, Corsi insinuates, was motivated by a sinister internationalist agenda – Hitler and his bride escaped to Argentina” (Nelson). Also, in 2017, seventy five Nazi objects such as, “a bust relief of Adolf Hitler, magnifying glasses inside elegant boxes with swastikas and even a macabre medical device used to measure head size” (“Massive Trove of Hidden ‘Original’ Nazi Artifacts Found in Argentina”). These objects were found behind a bookshelf that led to a passageway in the wall that held all the artifacts (Rey). Some of the artifacts found also had pictures of Hitler holding some of the objects in the Argentinian house. One last conspiracy dealing with Hitler’s suicide is the skull that the Russians had. It is well established that after recovering Hitler’s body, the Soviets took the already burned remains to Moscow, and apparently incinerated them (Nelson). After some time, researchers at the University of Connecticut tested that those statements were true (Nelson). They tested the believed to be skull of Hitler, and their results turned out different (Nelson). Their results were that the skull was actually a woman’s skull between the age of 20 and 40, so they believed that this was not Hitler’s skull