The tomb opens to the officer named by Adolf Hitler as “The iron-hearted man”

Berlin police are set in motion to find out who opened the tomb of Reinhard Heydrich, who has been a senior Nazi officer. An officer of the cemetery said that the officer's tomb had been found open Thursday behind us. In an official statement the police said no bone [...]
Berlin police are set in motion to find out who opened the tomb of Reinhard Heydrich, who has been a senior Nazi officer. An officer of the cemetery said that the officer's tomb had been found open Thursday behind us.
In an official statement, the police said that no bone was recovered from the grave, but added that the person who opened the tomb had knowledge of the person under it, as graves are without names.
Heydrich was one of the main organisers of mass killings against Jews and many Europeans during World War II.

The officer is considered by Adolf Hitler as “the iron-hearted man”. Heydirnch ruled in Bohemia and Moravia (Czech) until May 1942, months when Czech-Slovak agents, trained by the British, attacked his limo and he died shortly thereafter after failing to survive his wounds.
In retaliation, the Nazis destroyed the village of Lidice, killing all young men and boys, but did not stop there, they also exiled hundreds of women and children to concentration camps.











