Anne Frank’s Nazi arrest in Amsterdam may have ste…


Anne Frank, the teenage Holocaust victim whose posthumously published diary gave the world a glimpse of what it was like to hide from Nazi persecution, may have been betrayed by a prominent Jewish businessman, according to a cold case-style investigation outlined in a new book, “The Betrayal of Anne Frank A Cold Case Investigation,” by Rosemary Sullivan.

The book, which describes an investigation led by former FBI agent Vincent Panoke, is scheduled for release Tuesday.

Anne spent two years hiding in a secret annex in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam. On Aug. 4, 1944, Nazis broke in and carted off Anne’s family and four other Jewish people hiding there to concentration camps.

FILE- Journalist takes images of pictures of Anne Frank at the renovated Anne Frank House Museum in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2018. A cold case team that combed through evidence for five years may have solved one of World War II’s enduring mysteries: Who betrayed Jewish teenage diarist Anne Frank and her family ? Their answer, outlined in a new book, is that it most likely was a Jewish lawyer called Arnold van den Bergh. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

OPINION: ANNE FRANK’S ENDURING LEGACY

Only Otto Frank, Anne’s father, survived. After the war, he recovered his daughter’s diary and had it published in 1947.

Pankoke and his investigators reexamined the World War II-era case with modern techniques and technology — singling out Arnold van den Bergh, a prominent Jewish notary in Amsterdam, as the “most likely” betrayer of the Frank family. He may have done it in order to spare his own from deportation to a concentration camp.

“We have investigated over 30 suspects in 20 different scenarios, leaving one scenario we like to refer to as the most likely scenario,” filmmaker Thijs Bayens told the Associated Press Monday.

FILE PHOTO: A view of the exterior of the house where Anne Frank lived in Amsterdam November 21, 2007.  REUTERS/Jerry Lampen (NETHERLANDS)/File Photo

FILE PHOTO: A view of the exterior of the house where Anne Frank lived in Amsterdam November 21, 2007.  REUTERS/Jerry Lampen (NETHERLANDS)/File…




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