There may be no immediate way to fix a place with as many missions and masters as the FBI. One official, asked what it would take for the FBI to move past all the controversy, paused and said simply, “Time.” Many hope that the extraordinary confluence of events that drew the FBI into the 2016 election will prove to be, as Comey called it, “a 500-year flood” that won’t repeat itself anytime soon.
Picasso Nude Starring in Rockefeller Sale May Help Break Record
Their grandfather was said to be Nazi Germany’s richest man after building a weapons empire on the backs of slave labor.
Their father was involved in one of postwar Germany’s biggest political scandals. He almost frittered away the family fortune.
Enough remained for Viktoria-Katharina Flick and twin brother Karl-Friedrich Flick to lay claim, at 19, to being the world’s youngest billionaires. Each has $1.8 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Behind the riches, discreetly managed by their family office in Austria, lies a dark history of one of Germany’s wealthiest industrial dynasties.
Nazi Twins??? cant find any images of them
The World’s Youngest Billionaires Are Shadowed by a WWII Weapons Fortune
The Flicks are worth $1.8 billion each. Their industrialist grandfather was postwar Germany’s richest
man.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-03/world-s-youngest-billionaires-are-shadowed-by-ghosts-of-german-past
Hitler twins?
Viktoria-Katharina Flick and twin brother Karl-Friedrich Flick to lay claim, at 19, to being the world’s youngest billionaires. Each has $1.8 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Their grandfather was said to be Nazi Germany’s richest man after building a weapons empire on the backs of slave labor.
Nazi human experimentation
Experiments on twins
Experiments on twin children in concentration camps were created to show the similarities and differences in the genetics of twins, as well as to see if the human body can be unnaturally manipulated. The central leader of the experiments was Josef Mengele, who from 1943 to 1944 performed experiments on nearly 1,500 sets of imprisoned twins at Auschwitz. About 200 people survived these studies.[5] The twins were arranged by age and sex and kept in barracks between experiments, which ranged from injection of different dyes into the eyes of twins to see whether it would change their color to sewing twins together in attempts to create conjoined twins.[6][7] Often times, one twin would be forced to undergo experimentation, while the other was kept as a control. If the experimentation reached the point of death, Nazi's would bring in the second twin to kill them at the same time. Doctors would then look at the effects of experimentation and compare both bodies.[8]