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Facts About These Notorious Law Breakers and Their Criminal History

Al Capone - Bugsy Siegel
1930s mobsters. Eugene Cannevari Collection
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30. Forging for the Resistance

Adolphe Kaminsky. Times of Israel

Adolphe Kaminsky was fifteen when France fell to the Germans in 1940. It did not take long before he and his Jewish family felt the Nazi yoke. First, Adolphe’s home was seized early in the occupation to quarter German troops, and his family was evicted. The following year, the Nazis shot his mother dead. In 1943, Adolphe’s family was rounded up and interned in a holding camp, preparatory to deportation to Auschwitz. They were only saved by a last-minute intervention from the Argentinean consul.

In the meantime, Adolphe had joined the French Resistance at age sixteen. Sent by his father to pick up forged identity papers from a Resistance cell, he discovered that they faced difficulties removing a particular dye. The precocious chemist gave them a solution off the top of his head that immediately solved their problem. Impressed, the Resistance recruited Adolphe and put him to work in an underground laboratory in Paris. There, he spent the rest of the war forging identity papers for those on the run from the Nazis and in need of fake IDs, particularly Jews.

Written by

A lifelong history buff, I developed a particular passion for WW2 history as a child, when I spent hours listening to my grandfather, enraptured, as he recounted his wartime experiences in the British East African Campaign and with the British 8th Army in North Africa.

I graduated with a history BA from George Mason University, then went on to get a JD from the University of Virginia School of Law. After lawyering for a decade, I moved to sunny Rio de Janeiro and a less demanding career, opening a tourism agency in Copacabana.

A big chunk of my free time is spent blogging (you can follow me on Quora https://www.quora.com/profile/Khalid-Elhassan ) or freelance writing, mostly about my favorite subject, history.

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