Post by Deleted on Sept 5, 2012 13:17:14 GMT -5
Someone pinpointed the locarion of the Lindbergh ransom money 13 yrs before the kidnapping. He was Europe's foremost clairvoyant Erik Jan Hanussen, a Jewish mind-reader originally from Vienna, called "Europe's Greatest Oracle Since Nostradamus"
He could predict events & find hidden objects. He chose to live next door to the old Warburg Mansion in Berlin which was the ransom money hiding place. His minority Jewish sympathy for Hitler was shared by Max Warburg, the kidnapper James Warburg's uncle.
In "Mind Reading & Telepathy"(1919) Hanussen tells how you can FIND - a thing that is the stand-in proxy for that thing most sought after in 1932, the Lindbergh ransom money:"Finding a pin in a house in Berlin is possible...buy a ticket to Berlin, board the train, get off in Berlin, take a tram to a certain house, and , finally,find the pin somewhere in that house."(Arthur Magida,The Nazi Seance(New York:Palgrave Macmillan,2011)p.49). "Hanussen's apartment in Berlin's Tiergarten district"(p.106) nicely fits in the with the ransom's location in the Warburg Mansion at Tiergartenstrasse 27a. "But Hanussen was not the only Jew who was pro-Nazi or believed some good could come from Hitler...Max Warburg, a Jewish banker who would soon be helping the Nazis bring economic stability to Germany, pleaded for the protests against Hitler in other countries to end."(p.158). Two months after the kidnapping & the ransom money's being brought to Germany by James Warburg there is a news photo of "Hanussen demonstrating his clairvoyant abilities by finding an object that had been hidden near the Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, April 29, 1932."(p.153ff). This actually suggests another ugly scenario. Here's Hanussen downstairs in the Tiergarten district near the hidden ransom money putting on public exhibitions of finding hidden objects by going into houses. The author says it is possible Hanussen actually developed clairvoyant abilities by practicing it so often. He may have been on the verge of "finding" the hidden ransom money. Consequently, a month after the Reichstag fire, on March 24,1933 he is murdered by the S.A. This is certainly a timely & convenient murder if in fact Hanussen was literally knocking on the door of where the ransom money was hidden!
If James Warburg leaves the ransom money trophy in a home/room where the Panofsky family is living he perhaps uses Bruno Hauptmann's alibi about Isidore Fisch - he gives them a box or something that he asks them not to open. This seems like the kidnapper's LINE. We know Bruno kept that story-line all the way to the electric chair. Why change the formula? Jewish bankers are perhaps less curious, less needy, & more trustworthy than Bruno who opened HIS package & discovered & spent the ransom money, getting caught in the process. That didn't happen to the Panofskys who either returned it to James Warburg, took it with them on their emigration to Wisconsin, or left it there for the Nazi takeover of the building c. Dec. 8,1941.
He could predict events & find hidden objects. He chose to live next door to the old Warburg Mansion in Berlin which was the ransom money hiding place. His minority Jewish sympathy for Hitler was shared by Max Warburg, the kidnapper James Warburg's uncle.
In "Mind Reading & Telepathy"(1919) Hanussen tells how you can FIND - a thing that is the stand-in proxy for that thing most sought after in 1932, the Lindbergh ransom money:"Finding a pin in a house in Berlin is possible...buy a ticket to Berlin, board the train, get off in Berlin, take a tram to a certain house, and , finally,find the pin somewhere in that house."(Arthur Magida,The Nazi Seance(New York:Palgrave Macmillan,2011)p.49). "Hanussen's apartment in Berlin's Tiergarten district"(p.106) nicely fits in the with the ransom's location in the Warburg Mansion at Tiergartenstrasse 27a. "But Hanussen was not the only Jew who was pro-Nazi or believed some good could come from Hitler...Max Warburg, a Jewish banker who would soon be helping the Nazis bring economic stability to Germany, pleaded for the protests against Hitler in other countries to end."(p.158). Two months after the kidnapping & the ransom money's being brought to Germany by James Warburg there is a news photo of "Hanussen demonstrating his clairvoyant abilities by finding an object that had been hidden near the Potsdamer Platz in Berlin, April 29, 1932."(p.153ff). This actually suggests another ugly scenario. Here's Hanussen downstairs in the Tiergarten district near the hidden ransom money putting on public exhibitions of finding hidden objects by going into houses. The author says it is possible Hanussen actually developed clairvoyant abilities by practicing it so often. He may have been on the verge of "finding" the hidden ransom money. Consequently, a month after the Reichstag fire, on March 24,1933 he is murdered by the S.A. This is certainly a timely & convenient murder if in fact Hanussen was literally knocking on the door of where the ransom money was hidden!
If James Warburg leaves the ransom money trophy in a home/room where the Panofsky family is living he perhaps uses Bruno Hauptmann's alibi about Isidore Fisch - he gives them a box or something that he asks them not to open. This seems like the kidnapper's LINE. We know Bruno kept that story-line all the way to the electric chair. Why change the formula? Jewish bankers are perhaps less curious, less needy, & more trustworthy than Bruno who opened HIS package & discovered & spent the ransom money, getting caught in the process. That didn't happen to the Panofskys who either returned it to James Warburg, took it with them on their emigration to Wisconsin, or left it there for the Nazi takeover of the building c. Dec. 8,1941.