According to reports, Argentina Nazi is ready to reduce all government-accepted files belonging to the fugitive, which escaped and settled in Argentina after World War II.
Documents will probably include Nazi-Linked Bank accounts and archival records, which would be given details of the use of Nazi “Retline”, which were monetary and logistic paths that the Nazis used to avoid justice and escape from Argentina after the war.
Guillermo Alberto Francos, Argentina’s Internal Minister, announced on Tuesday, Buenos Aires Times cited DNEWS.
Members of Nazi Sturmbetillung (SA) marched to Litpoldhan with their banners at the Nurnberg rally to mark the 6th Nazi Party Congress, 9 September 1934. The event was filmed by Lenny Refanesthal and then released as’ Trimph Des Villains’ (‘Trimph of the Wiles). (FPG/Archive Photo/Getty Image)
Hitler WWII ‘Escape’ investigated by CIA, shows the Bombshell Document
It is estimated that 10,000 Nazis and other fascist war criminals escaped justice for Holocaust atrocities by fled to Argentina and other Latin American countries.
Notorious high-level Nazis, including Holocost Mastermind Adolf Ichman and “Angel of Death” Joseph Mengeel, fled to the South American country, while rumors have been roaming for years that former Nazi party leader Adolf Hitler also ended.
The pending release Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chak Grassley came after, R-Ayova, requested his release in a letter to Argentine President Xavier Milli last month. Grassley Credit Suisse and Nazi-Link accounts and Retline are investigating their historical servicing.
In the letter, Grassley wrote that records would help in highlighting the Nazi scheme of secret escape routes. Grassley recently headed by a Senate Judiciary Committee, which is focused on completing the tide of antismitism in the US.
Miley promised the officials of Simon Visanthal Center to fulfill their full support in providing access to documents. The center is famous for tracking the Nazis and is named after the famous Nazi Shikari.

The pending release Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chak Grassley, after R-Ayova, was followed by Argentine President Xavier Milli last month requested her release in a letter. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarranko)
12,000 Nazis showed Swiss bank accounts in Argentina in the 1930s with newly discovered documents.
In 2017, the CIA rejected a document that the intelligence agency investigated the possibility that Adolf Hitler was alive in South America by the end of 1955 – nearly a decade after the end of World War II ended.
A three-page document, which appears on the CIA website, highlights a former SS soldier who told the detectives that he regularly met Hitler in Colombia.
The document suggests that Hitler may have worked as an employee of a shipping company, which was potentially before fleeing in Argentina. The informer on the second page is a picture of Philip Citroen, with a person he claims that Hitler is in the mid -1950s.

In 2017, the CIA rejected a document that the intelligence agency investigated the possibility that Adolf Hitler was alive in South America by the end of 1955 – nearly a decade after the end of World War II ended. (Getty image)
It is not known whether Argentina will shed any light on Hitler conspiracy by Argentina.
Historians of the mainstream say Hitler committed a cyanide capsule in Berlin in 1945 and committed suicide by shooting himself. His bodies were later discovered by Soviet soldiers and buried at an unprecedented place. A German court declared Hitler dead, but not until 1956, more than a decade after the end of the war.
His wife Eva Braun also killed himself by swallowing cyanide pills.
One of the main architects of the final solution, Ichman, survived Europe after World War II and was living under a name in Argentina when Israeli agents snatched him from a road in 1960. He was later hung in Israel and hung.
Meanwhile, Mejel was arrested by US forces in 1945, but was released shortly thereafter. Then he spent years on runs and was infamous to complete cruel medical experiments. He arrived in Argentina in 1949 and stayed there for a decade before Paraguay and later fleeing Brazil, where he died in 1979.

Thousands of Nazis are understood to flee to Argentina at the Nazi Sturmbetillung (SA) members with Litpoldhain at the Nurnberg rally in 1934. (FPG/Archive Photo/Getty Image)
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After the war, including the US, Canada and Mexico, the Nazis participated in many countries in the US.
In 2020, a cash of documents appeared to identify more than 12,000 Nazis, who lived in Argentina in the 1930s and who had one or more bank accounts that now have Credit Suisse Bank.
The Simon Visanthal Center said that the files were found in a storeroom at a former Nazi headquarters in Buenos Aires.
Fox News’ Lucia Suarez Song and Chris Siakia contributed to this report.