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Some people accept that Adolf Hitler died in his bunker for closure, but consider the following:
No records show an Adi Lupis ever being born or having died nor any record of him arriving or leaving
According to Senor Stefan Aceituna, who was one of General Franco's drivers during 1945 and beyond, he was sent to meet a plane arriving at the
He described the plane as "of German origin" and remembered that it arrived very late, "probably after
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Some Junkers Ju 290 airframes were civilianised during the war to fly discreet missions to
Ju-290A-6 was built for the sole purpose of being a transport for Hitler. Original pressurization was abandoned, and the aircraft was completed as a 50 seat transport. This aircraft was flying with KG200 at Finsterwalde and in the last week of April 1945 flew from
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In May of 1945 the East wing of General Franco's residence in
In May 1945 Franco's medical staff ordered from
Theo Morell, Hitler's personal physician had introduced Hitler to the anti-flatulence medication and Hitler had become so addicted to the strychnine base of these pills that he was known to swallow them by the handful.
Suddenly, in May of 1945, General Franco has a need of the identical medication and the need continues unabated until October 1947.
About thirteen miles from the Presidential Palace in
At the end of 1947 the director of this clinic, one Dr Victor Vega Diaz, also held the title of "President of the International Association of Cardiologists". In other words, he was recognized as the world's foremost heart specialist.
According to Vega Diaz's personal diary, he received a telephone call from the Presidential Palace in the early afternoon of
Why would the Spanish dictator contact the 'Hospital Clinico San Carlos' when the larger, more modern, and much better equipped 'Hospital Francisco Franco', named in his honour, was almost twelve miles nearer? Could it be because all previous medical needs of the General himself and the members of his entourage had always, until this day, been catered to by the hospital bearing his name, and that the General did not want any record of Senor Adi Lupus added to his personal file?
Dr Diaz' diary describes the patient as "between fifty and sixty years of age … in an emaciated condition" His personal files record that he examined a patient 'in his late fifties or early sixties' (at that time Hitler would have been fifty-eight years and six months of age) and records that at 3:32 pm he certified the patient's death from "Cardio Myopathy", a fairly basic heart attack and it appears that no autopsy was performed. .
At the top of the page, beside the words "Patient Identification" the doctor had written: "Senor Adi Lupus".
Unfortunately the doctors personal notes do not elaborate further and the Clinico San Carlos has relocated since 1947 and if any official hospital records ever existed they are now lost for ever.
Doesn't it seem illogical to summon the best cardiologist in the world to treat a lowly gardener?
Despite lengthy searches of all cemeteries within reasonable proximity to
No amount of searching has been able to uncover a document anywhere in
No birth certificate, no marriage record, no tax file or employment history, no registration on an electoral roll. Until
Is it no more than coincidence that Lupus is Latin for wolf, the nom-de-plume which Hitler favoured, the title he appended to his yacht (The Sea Wolf), his plane (The Flying Wolf) and two of his Führer headquarters (The Wolf's Lair and The Wolf's Den).
He used the pseudonym Mr Wolf when he first met Eva. If it is purely coincidental, then we must apply the same assumption to the Christian name 'Adi'. This happens to be the form of address used in private by Eva Braun.
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