Posted: Thu Sep 14, 2006 8:48 pm
Off course, it was a fake Hess. That's why Churchill played-down the whole thing and refused to allow him to be photographed. The real Hess arrived at the air-field for one of his many flying escapades (he was an award-winning pilot) and his flying suit was missing, so he borrowed another. The Hess who then falls out of the plane in Renfrewshire is wearing the suit with the name Hess on it. He is gaunt, but the real Hess is well-built. He makes a big show of being a vegitarian but that lasts about five minutes. By the time he is on trial he is scoffing meat.
He refuses to see his wife until the 60s, by which time he has digested countless letters from her and become aware of many memories the real Hess had. Then a doctor examines him and notices his World War One bullet wound is missing and then a book gets writen about it in the 70s called 'The Murder of Rudolph Hess' and then that's it.
He refuses to see his wife until the 60s, by which time he has digested countless letters from her and become aware of many memories the real Hess had. Then a doctor examines him and notices his World War One bullet wound is missing and then a book gets writen about it in the 70s called 'The Murder of Rudolph Hess' and then that's it.