I find this type of information very interesting, I’ve wondered how many Nazis escaped Europe and ended up in Argentina and other South American countries.
There was this feller named Otto Skorzenky. He was a commando for the Nazis. At the end of the war he traded the Allied powers the names of many of the scientists that were scooped up by our side in Operation Paperclip for his freedom and he was able to smuggle a bunch of nazis to argentina after the war where he had served out the rest of his life as the security detail to Evita Peron.
Argentinian Archbishop Antonio Caggiano established the Argentine Catholic Action to help anti-Communists, Fascists, Nazis and their collaborators who were on the run. Thousands of Nazi collaborators from the Catholic and clerical regimes in Vichy France, Slovakia, and Croatia received help to escape to Argentina. In due course, his group extended its assistance to Austrians and Germans.
In August 1948, Austrian Bishop Alois Hudal took delivery of 5,000 visas for distribution by his branch of Argentine Catholic Action to help "anti-communist fighters" from the ranks of Austrian and German soldiers. All they had to do was take their new identity papers to the Red Cross, and they'd receive travel papers. That's how Eichmann and Mengele got to South America.
Adolf Eichmann's name was changed to Roberto Klement. His Red Cross passport number 100940 was issued in Genoa on June 1, 1950. Thanks to his landing permit, he qualified for a travel document, but still needed a reference to prove his bonafides in order to get the passport. A Franciscan priest, Father Eduardo Domiter was linked with a former Captain of German Intelligence, called Reinhard Kops who had fled from Austria to Rome at the end of the war. Bishop Hudal appointed Kops to process applications for immigration to Argentina and installed him in the DAIE (Delegación de Asociaciones Israelitas Argentinas: Central Organization of Argentinian Jews) office in Genoa.
Once Eichmann got his landing permit, and his refugee passport, he went to the Argentinian Consulate in Genoa, where a visa was stamped on his travel papers. He was issued an identity certificate that he would need for his ID card in Argentina. Once he had his medical exam at the DAIE, he was ready to leave Europe. Once Eichmann was settled in Argentina, his wife had him declared dead. She took back her maiden name, but their two sons remained Eichmanns. She got travel papers for the three of them, and moved to Argentina to be with her husband, where she remained until he was apprehended.
Hitler died in the 70s, had two kids so they say. That’s actually far more believable than some dental records.