Aribert Heim (born June 28, 1914) is an Austrian doctor and one of the world's most wanted Nazi war criminals. As an SS doctor in a concentration camp in Mauthausen (where many Spanish Republicans were sent), he is accused of killing many inmates with sadistic methods, such as direct injections of toxic compounds into the hearts of his victims without painkillers.
The prisoners in Concentration Camp Mauthausen called Heim "Dr. Death." For about 2 months (October to December, 1941), Heim was in the camp near Linz, Austria, where he carried out the same experiments on Jews as the Auschwitz doctor Josef Mengele had done. "Heim scared his prisoners to death," said a survivor. The SS doctor operated without anesthetics and Jewish inmates were poisoned with various insertions directly into the heart in order for the time of death to increase. The doctor wanted to see which poison was the fastest and cheapest way to make people die.
On March 15th 1945, he was captured by US soldiers and sent to a camp for prisoners of war. He was released under dubious circumstances and worked as a doctor at Baden-Baden until his disappearance in 1962. He had been tipped off by an informant that the Austrian police were investigating him for war crimes. Subsequently, he disappeared, but there is still a worldwide arrest warrant for him. Heim was, after Adolf Eichmann's top assistant, Alois Brunner, the second most wanted Nazi officer.
The money transferred from the account raised the suspicions of Israeli officials, who contacted the Criminal Institute in the German state of Baden-Württemberg. After the Criminal Institute looked into the account, they concluded that the money was Heim's, which suggested that Aribert Heim was still alive and that his family had lied about his alleged death in South America due to cancer. German investigators together with the Simon Wiesenthal Center discovered Heim's secret bank accounts in Berlin in the early 2000s. They proved to hold €1 million (£680,000) in cash and other assets. Heim has been assumed to be still alive, and this is substantiated by the fact that none of his three children ever claimed any of this money. Tax records prove that, as late as 2001, Heim's lawyer asked the German authorities to refund capital gains taxes levied on him because he was living abroad.
Heim has reportedly hidden out in South America, Spain and the Balkans. Efraim Zuroff, Simon Wiesenthal's successor at the Wiesenthal Center has initiated an active search for his whereabouts, and in late 2005, Spanish police determined his location as being Palafrugell. According to "El Mundo", Aribert Heim had been helped by associates of Otto Skorzeny, who had organized one of the biggest ODESSA bases in Franco's Spain. ODESSA was obviously still in place, in one way or another. Press reports in mid-October 2005 suggested that Heim's arrest by Spanish police was "imminent". Within a few days, however, newer reports suggested that he had successfully evaded capture and had relocated to either another part of Spain or to Denmark. In early 2006, Heim was believed to be in Chile where his daughter Waltraud is reported to live since the early 1970s.
1914 births | Living people | Austrian physicians | Nazi concentration camp personnel | SS personnel | Disappeared people
Aribert Heim | Aribert Heim | Aribert Heim | Aribert Heim | Aribert Heim
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