What the CIA record says: Did Hitler really die during the war?

Contradictation between real documents and facts about Adolf Hitler. How is the truth of the death of the bloody Nazi dictator? In a CIA declassified file, held so far in the US National Archives, Adolf Hitler is said to have survived World War II and not died in suicide [...]
Contradictation between real documents and facts about Adolf Hitler. How is the truth of the death of the bloody Nazi dictator?
In a CIA declassified file, held so far in the US National Archives, Adolf Hitler is said to have survived World War II and died in his bunker on 30 April 1945, while Berlin fell under the invasion of the “Berge Army”.
In the document, dating back to October 3, 1955, and is available on the site of the Central Intelligence Agency, an agent codenamed “Cimody-3”, claims it was “contacted on September 29, 1955 by a trusted friend” in Colombia, who had served under his command in Europe and that “is actually standing a Maracaibo<5>.

The source has shown agent “Cimeody-3” that “has learned from a former German SS member, confidentially, that Adolf Hitler” was still alive in 1955, reports Repubblica.
So the story would have to be written from the front, if it wasn't for “prove” related to intelligence reporting: a photo in “hia, Colombia, South America 1954” where the former SS official, Phillip Citroen, appeared, along with Hitler in what would be his new identity as refugee in South America: Adolf Schittelmyor.

The beauty is that Hitler would not only bear the name of baptism - but the picture appears just as everyone remembers it - express, mustache, attitude. In 1954, while the world remembered him dead, but the Russians and Americans continued to seek final proof of his end, Hitler had begun a new life in Colombia, maintaining his common appearance in the face of all identities produced by experts from various intelligent services describing how he could be transformed. A little reliable.

The Soviets, in particular, have for years claimed to own some of Hitler's remains, even though dictator Eva Brown's troops were officially burned after suicide.
On the other hand, American scientist Nick Bellantoni from the University of Connecticut was allowed to examine those remains in 2009, concluding that some of the skulls Moscow owned belonged to a woman between the ages of 20 and 40, while Hitler was 56 in 1945.












