Bildquelle: Von Author and location unknown.Bettina Stangneth's caption for the image says: "Unknown photographer, undated (1941), AKG Images, 4217270".[3] The Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (Bavarian State Library) website used to attribute the image to Heinrich Hoffmann (18851957) ("image: hoff-895; negative: Hoffmann 8841"), a German photographer who was known as Hitler's personal photographer. The library obtained the negative and a copy of the image as part of a collection purchased from Hoffmann's son in 1993. Following an inquiry from a Wikipedian in 2014, the library checked the negative and confirmed "with certainty" that this is not one of Hoffmann's images. His negatives were made of glass and had identifying numbers etched onto them. The library said they cannot determine the authorship of the Eichmann negative. - Immediate source Blic.rs. Also Yad Vashem and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. The latter credits DIZ Muenchen GMBH, Sueddeutscher Verlag Bilderdienst. Image ID: 00126367., Gemeinfrei, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=75166943
21.08.2025,
NTV, 23.30: Adolf Eichmann – Geständnis eines Nazi-Verbrechers, Doku, 2022
“1961 stand Generalstaatsanwalt Gideon Hausner dem Nazi-Verbrecher Adolf Eichmann vor einem israelischen Gericht gegenüber und beschuldigte ihn der Ermordung von Millionen von Juden. Eichmann leugnete alles. Um seine Schuld zu beweisen, macht sich Hausner auf die Suche nach einem sagenumwobenen Beweisstück – stundenlangen Audio-Interviews, in denen er sich gegenüber dem Nazi Willem Sassen offen mit seinen abscheulichen Verbrechen brüstet.” (prisma.de)