Aribert Heim
A son of notorious Nazi doctor Aribert Heim was quoted as saying Sunday that he wants his father declared legally dead so he can take control of his money and donate some of it to help document the suffering that occurred at a former concentration camp.
Ruediger Heim told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper that his father — dubbed "Dr. Death" and atop the Simon Wiesenthal Center's list of most-wanted suspected Nazi war criminals — should officially be declared missing and then dead.
Manhunt
Associated Press
Efraim Zuroff, head of the Israeli branch of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, told a news conference his mission to southern reaches of Americas led him to at least four people who claim to have seen former concentration camp physician Aribert Heim in past 45 days
"Between 1962 and 1967, two notes appeared in our mailbox. There was a single sentence written on them, 'I am doing fine.' But if those letters were really from my father, I do not know," the paper quoted him as saying.
Heim also said that he has no idea if his father, who would be 94, is alive or dead.
He told the paper he is working with a lawyer to see how he can have his wanted father declared missing and then dead so as to get control of the man's bank account.
He said he, his brother and sister only discovered in 1997 that a bank account in his father's name existed. If he could get control of the money, he told the newspaper he would donate to help document suffering in the Mauthausen concentration camp near Linz, Austria, where his father worked as camp doctor in October and November 1941.
So far, Heim's children have made no claim to a bank account with $1.78 million and other investments in his name. To do that, they would have to produce proof that their father is dead.