Carefree Tycoon

Supreme Sacred Ring, Carefree Tycoon!

In the 80s, a good-quality old Hainan Huanghuali round-backed armchair from the Qing Dynasty could be yours for just twenty yuan. Now, two million yuan o...

Chapter 885 Cemetery

The layout of the small town of Ita is similar to that of Chascomús. Both are divided into small "tofu blocks" by narrow streets. Looking down from the air, the whole city looks like a Go board.

The town is mainly populated by Paraguayans of Spanish and Italian descent. There are also some German and Indian mixed-race people in the city, but overall, white people still make up the majority.

In a community near a cemetery in the northwest of the city, Yang Jing and his team found the house where Martin Bauman lived at the time.

According to the information obtained by Yang Jing, after Martin Baumann fled to Paraguay again from his secluded place Chascomus in Argentina, he came to Ita under the alias Hermann Schröder, bought a house here, and continued to live in seclusion.

Unfortunately, Martin Baumann developed stomach cancer not long after arriving in Ita. He persisted for four years, but in the end, the executioner did not die on the gallows of the Allies, but died in a local hospital. His body was buried in a cemetery not far from the house where he lived.

As for the skeleton dug out from the Rehrte Station in West Berlin, although the DNA test eventually confirmed that it was Martin Bormann, Yang Jing believed that Martin Bormann did die in Ita at that time, but later some intelligence personnel bribed local officials, secretly dug out Martin Bormann's remains, transported them back to Germany, and buried them near the Rehrte Station.

As for why those intelligence personnel did this, it is actually very simple.

Martin Bormann was, after all, a high-ranking war criminal. As Hitler's secretary general, he knew a lot of secrets of the government, and the crimes he committed were enough to get him hanged dozens of times. But such a war criminal who should have been on the gallows eventually escaped from Berlin, which was under a tight military blockade. It would be strange if there was no trick.

You can figure out why this happened even with your butt.

It's very simple. Martin Bormann knows a lot of secrets of German treasury, including clues to treasury treasures. It's obvious that he was able to escape from Berlin in exchange for some clues to treasury treasures.

Don’t think that the Soviet Red Army controlled by Stalin are good people. In the face of huge interests, it is estimated that few people can stick to the bottom line.

So it is not surprising that Martin Bormann was let go by the Soviets.

Later, since Martin Bormann died of stomach cancer, his body could still be useful. For example, his remains could be secretly transported back to Germany and exhumed at an "appropriate" time.

So, we didn't let Martin Baumann escape, did we? He committed suicide here!

So, don't blame us for letting Martin Baumann run away for no reason!

Maybe someone let Martin Baumann go because they were greedy for wealth. This was a serious mistake. But since the mistake had been made, we had to find a way to make up for it. Obviously, this method was a very good way to make up for it.

Such a simple thing, Yang Jing asked himself, if he were a senior official of those countries, he would also use this method to quell the condemnation of the domestic people.

Moreover, according to the information obtained, it is enough to prove that although Martin Bormann escaped from Germany and there was a subsequent trial, the executioner was always under surveillance. But why didn't the intelligence personnel of these countries arrest Martin Bormann and bring him back for trial? This is also very simple.

The reason why Martin Bauman was able to escape all the way to Argentina smoothly must be that there was some shameful exchange involved. Once a person like Martin Bauman is arrested again, he will inevitably be subject to a public trial, and no one dares to execute this guy secretly.

Then the question arises. Once Martin Bormann is put on public trial, the dark secret of his fleeing to South America will inevitably be exposed. This will undoubtedly be a huge humiliation for the Allied government and may even lead to the fall of a government.

In this case, it would be better to let this guy fend for himself than to catch him back.

Whether it is Britain, France, the United States or the Soviet Union, they are not as radical as the Israeli agents in arresting Adolf Hillman. The governments of these countries have too many things to consider, because their own asses are not clean. Do they dare to expose such things?

"Boss, it has been confirmed that the house is the one where Martin Baumann lived before his death." On the third day after arriving in Ita, Chris gave Yang Jing a certain answer.

With the experience in Chascomus, Chris and his team naturally became more and more familiar with doing this kind of thing, especially in a poor country like Paraguay, where money can solve almost everything.

They wanted to look up some information from more than 60 years ago, and using US dollars was more effective than anything else. So they easily found the relevant information from the archives of the Ita City Government, which had been sealed for more than half a century.

"Hermann Schröder, of German descent, entered the country from Argentina by boat along the Paraná River on October 23, 1954, and purchased a house at 22 Charles Street in Ita on November 2... Hermann Schröder died of stomach cancer at the San Lorenzo Municipal Hospital in Ita on February 9, 1959 and was buried in the cemetery of the San Lorenzo Catholic Church in Ita at the age of 60..."

Looking at the yellowed document in his hand, Yang Jing felt that money was indeed very attractive. Chris and his gang actually took out all the original files from the city government archives.

These files clearly record how Martin Baumann, who used the alias Hermann Schröder, entered Paraguay and bought a house in Ita. There are also clear records of how he died, where he died, and where he was buried.

My dear, there is more to this chapter. Please click on the next page to continue reading. It’s even more exciting later!