In the Doctor Category, Team U.S.Eh! selects the Angel of Death, Josef Mengele.
While obviously a complete nutbar, Josef Mengele is one of the most infamous physicians of all time. His experiments while at Birkenau and Auschwitz were abhorrent, and inexcusable.
While interested in heredity and human abnormalities, Mengele had a great fascination with twins.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josef_Mengele
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The subjects of Mengele's research were better fed and housed than ordinary prisoners and were, for the time being, safe from the gas chambers. When visiting his child subjects, he introduced himself as "Uncle Mengele" and offered them sweets. Some survivors remember that despite his grim acts, he was also called "Mengele the protector".
The book Children of the Flames, by Lucette Matalon Lagnado and Shiela Cohn Dekel, chronicles Mengele's medical experimental activities on approximately 3,000 twins who passed through the Auschwitz death camp during World War II until its liberation at the end of the war. Only 100 pairs of twins survived; 60 years later, they came forward about the special privileges they were given in Auschwitz owing to Mengele's interest in twins, and how as a result they have suffered, as the children who survived his medical experiments and injections.
Auschwitz prisoner Alex Dekel has said: "I have never accepted the fact that Mengele himself believed he was doing serious work — not from the slipshod way he went about it. He was only exercising his power. Mengele ran a butcher shop — major surgeries were performed without anaesthesia. Once, I witnessed a stomach operation — Mengele was removing pieces from the stomach, but without any anaesthetic. Another time, it was a heart that was removed, again without anaesthesia. It was horrifying. Mengele was a doctor who became mad because of the power he was given. Nobody ever questioned him — why did this one die? Why did that one perish? The patients did not count. He professed to do what he did in the name of science, but it was a madness on his part."
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Mengele eventually escaped to South America, living an affluent lifestyle under protection from Nazi ex-pats. Mengele moved from Argentina to Paraguay, then eventually to Brazil where he died in 1979.
In 1977, his only son Rolf, never having known his father before, visited him in Brazil and found an unrepentant Nazi who claimed that he "had never personally harmed anyone in his whole life".
In a 2008 book about Mengele, Argentine historian Jorge Camarasa speculated that Mengele, under the alias Rudolph Weiss, continued his human experimentation in South America and as a result of these experiments, a municipality in Brazil, Candido Godoi has a very high birthrate of twin children: one in five pregnancies, with a substantial amount of the population looking Nordic. His theory was rejected by Brazilian scientists who had studied twins living in the area; they suggested genetic factors within that community as a more likely explanation.