The Bloody REVENGE of Adolf Eichmann's SONS and The Brutal Last Days of the Nazi Criminal

In May nineteen sixty, Adolf Eichmann stepped off the bus on Garibaldi Street in Buenos Aires like any other night. Ten years living as Ricardo Klement, a Mercedes-Benz technician, in a house without electricity in a working-class neighborhood. Three seconds later he was inside a Mossad vehicle. What happened during the nine days that followed, handcuffed in a room with his eyes blindfolded, did not appear in any official record until decades later. The trial in Jerusalem was the first in history to be fully televised. Eichmann listened from a bulletproof glass booth wearing headphones. When survivors described the trains, the selections on the platforms, the gas chambers, Eichmann kept his eyes fixed on his documents. The Sassen tapes, recorded in Buenos Aires without his full knowledge, destroyed his defense: he had personally argued with Himmler to ensure the extermination would not be stopped. Three months after his execution, his sons Klaus and Horst were detained in Buenos Aires with three rifles, seventeen Molotov cocktails and plans for an attack against school buses carrying Jewish children. The Argentine government released them without charges within forty-eight hours. The police report was classified. Subscribe to the channel and activate the bell so you never miss our next episodes.