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Nazi arsenal seized from Argentine vendor’s home

By Lucila Sigal and Leila Miller

Item 1 of 3 Nazi arsenal in this undated handout photo after Argentine police seized an arsenal of Nazi military uniforms, weapons, ammunition and accessories from a merchant in Buenos Aires province who was selling them online, according to a police statement, in Argentina. Policia de la Provincia de Buenos Aires/via REUTERS

[1/3] Nazi arsenal in this undated handout photo after Argentine police seized an arsenal of Nazi military uniforms, weapons, ammunition and accessories from a merchant in Buenos Aires province who was… Purchase Licensing Rights , opens new tab Read more

BUENOS AIRES, June 10 (Reuters) – Buenos Aires provincial police on Wednesday announced the seizure of Nazi ​uniforms, weapons, ammunition and accessories from the home of ‌a man who sold items on the internet, authorities said.

Officials said that on April 8 they learned of a post on ​Facebook Marketplace in which a user under the name ​Fernando Martinsohn, featuring an image of a U.S. ⁠military star, offered to sell military uniforms and accessories. ​Authorities identified him as Diego Fernando Martinez.

With a court-ordered search ​warrant, police went to Martinez’s home in the suburbs of Buenos Aires, whose entrance hallway had floor tiles with swastikas, the authorities said ​in a statement. Among the items seized was a ​copy of “Mein Kampf” by Adolf Hitler and daggers with swastika insignia.

Martinez ‌did ⁠not respond to attempts to get comment from him through a Facebook page provided by authorities.

Police did not specify what charges Martinez could face. Argentine law prohibits the distribution ​of propaganda that ​promotes ideas ⁠of racial superiority.

Nazi-related discoveries occasionally pop up in Argentina, which after World War Two received ​both Holocaust survivors and dozens of Nazi ​war criminals, ⁠including Adolf Eichmann and Josef Mengele.

Last year, retired Dutch systems specialist Paul Post’s examination of his father’s Nazi-era diaries ⁠led to ​Buenos Aires authorities charging the daughter ​of a high-ranking Nazi official with concealing an 18th-century painting looted during the ​Holocaust.

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