Anne Frank: Many years of investigation led to a suspect – a surprise for her death

To a suspect – surprise for her death Anne Frank, the teenage author of the famous diary that was discovered in her hiding place next to an Amsterdam canal, led a six-year investigation.

A relatively unknown person, the Jewish notary Arnold van den Berg, was named by the investigative team that included retired FBI agent Vincent Pancock and about 20 historians, criminologists and data experts.

More than 75 years after the raid Nazi At the building in Amsterdam, investigators concluded that it was “very likely” that Van den Berg would hand over the Frank family in order to save his own family, Peter van Tuisk said in a statement on Monday (17/1). member of the research team, in the NBC newspaper.

Anna was discovered on August 4, 1944, after hiding for two years. Mip Guis, one of the family’s helpers, kept it Anna diary safely until it was published by Anna’s father, Otto, in 1947, two years after the death of his daughter at the Bergen-Belzen concentration camp at the age of 15.

The Anne Frank Diary, which had millions of readers around the world, has been translated into 60 languages.

The attempt to determine the identity of the traitor was not intended to lead to persecution, but to solve one of the greatest mysteries in the Netherlands of World War II.

How the investigators got to the suspect

Using Big Data analysis techniques, as reported by the Athens News Agency, a main database was created with lists of Nazi collaborators, informants, historical documents, police records and previous investigations to uncover new data.

Dozens of scenarios and suspect locations were visualized on a map to identify the traitor, based on knowledge of the hideout, motivation and opportunities available.

Anne Frank

The findings of the new research will be published in the book by Canadian author Rosemary Sullivan “The Traitor of Anne Frank” which will be released tomorrow, Tuesday.

Dozens of suspects had been named in previous decades, but never before had modern research techniques been so widely applied to identify a suspect.

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