EX-GI TELLS OF SEEING JOSEF MENGELE IN A U.S. PRISONER-OF-WAR CAMP

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000504300008-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 27, 2012
Sequence Number: 
8
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 15, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000504300008-5.pdf98.01 KB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504300008-5 C:! c t,R WASHINGTON POST 15 February 1985 Ex-GI Tells of Seeing Josef Mengele In a U.S. Prisoner-of-War Camp By Jay Mathews Wanhmgton Pant Staff Writer LOS ANGELES, Feb. 14-A for- mer U.S. soldier said today that he saw a man identified as Dr. Josef Mengele at an American prisoner- of-war camp in Germany in 1945, the first witness to suggest that the notorious Nazi war criminal was once in U.S. hands. - Two U.S. senators at a news con- ference to hear the account by re- tired aerospace engineer Walter Kempthorne said they will insist that the U.S. government deter- mine whether Mengele was in American custody and, if so, how he could have escaped it. Mengele, who would be 73 if alive, was a physician and former major in the Nazi secret police who allegedly sent thousands of concen- tration-camp prisoners to their deaths in gas chambers and used others, including many children, in painful medical experiments. Con- sidered the most -notorious Nazi war criminal still at large, Mengele is wanted in West Germany on mur- der charges and is thought to have been hiding in South America since the war. Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) said at the news conference at the Si- mon Wiesenthal Center that inves- tigations of U.S. dealings with other former Nazis raise the possibility that U.S. officials may have helped Mengele escape in exchange for information about Soviet activities in Europe. "I think Mengele is alive. I think the noose is tightening," said Sen. Alfonse M. D'Amato (R-N.Y.), who praised a recent Justice Depart- ment decision to begin a special investigation of the Mengele case. But, he added, citing a Freedom of information Act suit that he has filed against the U.S. Army, "the release of all pertinent documents should be the order of the day." Army spokesman Lt. Col. Craig MacNab said Kempthorne's report "is brand-new information which we welcome." The Army recently has released other documents, one of which suggests Mengele once lived in Canada, and MacNab said it will work with the center and other of- ficials to pursue the lead. "The problem is an embarrassment, not a lack, of records .... They all have to be gone through by hand," he said. Kempthorne, 59, of Riverside, Calif., said he wrote to Rabbi ar- vin Hier, dean of the WieseRhal Center, after reading a Tout t h- cen- ter's earlier disclosure that a U.S. intelligence officer t oug t en- gele had been briefly in U.S. cus- tody in 1947. Kempthorne said he was serving as a perimeter guard at an Army i Counter-Intelligence Corps post at Idar-Oberstein, 50 miles east of I Trier in southwestern Germany, man f en- when he encountered the t' ied as eneIe. A friend who had a habit of trad- ing favors with other soldiers in- vited Kempthorne to help deliver some liquor or cigarettes to a guard inside the post. There he said he saw what appeared to be a German prisoner standing "at rigid atten- tion, ... he had a fixed look on his face .... He was breathing heavily and was red-faced." In a letter to Hier released today, Kempthorne quoted his conversa- tion with the man's two U.S. guards: Kempthorne: "Geez, what are you guys trying to do to him? He's ready to fall over." One of the guards: "We're get- ting him in shape to.get hung. This here is Mengele. The bastard that sterilized 3,000 women at Ausch- witz. (Turning to the prisoner) C'mon, boy, you're good for anoth- er 100. ." On his guard's command- the prisoner dropped to the ground to do more pushups, but was too ex- hausted and was led away, Kemp- thorne said. Kempthorne said he does not re- member the prisoner's face, but noted he had black hair and was about 5 feet 8 and 165 pounds, which Hier said nearly matches Mengele's description. He remem- bered the prisoner wore "shell- or horned-rimmed glasses." - Hier said pictures taken of Men- gele before the war show him with- out glasses and Kempthorne's fail- ure to remember facial character- istics might make identification from old photographs difficult..Hier said he hoped publicity about the case and the search of Army records would uncover more wit- nesses or data on the fugitive Nazi. Kempthorne said he has occa- sionally thought of the incident when reading about Mengele since then, but did not know who might be interested in hearing his story until he read of the center's inves- tigation. "I always visualize the name of Mengele with the face of the man I saw in that camp because I connect it with 3,000 sterilized women," Kempthorne said. "That's a mental image that is hard to .forget, espe- cially for a 19-year-old kid." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504300008-5