Richard Lindenberg, 1911-1992
”Richard Lindenberg was a physician and pathologist, a Luftwaffe[空 軍] Captain during World War II, later Chief Neuropathologist of the State of Maryland. He testified before the Rockefeller Commission on the death of President John F. Kennedy.”
”Lindenberg received his medical education at the universities of Bonn, Munich, and Berlin, where his M.D. was awarded in 1934. He served his internship and residency, 1934-1939, at the university hospitals of Hamburg and Munich and at the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institute for Brain Research in Berlin as Oberarzt (senior resident or attending physician) under Professor Hugo Spatz.[1][2] From 1939 until 1945, he was Air District Pathologist of the Luftwaffe, with the rank of captain in the medical corps, also under Hugo Spatz.[3] He was senior resident in neuropsychiatry and director of the neuropathologic laboratory, Neuropsychiatric Hospital, at the University of Frankfurt-am-Main, 1945-1947.[4]
In 1947 Lindenberg became an Operation Paperclip scientist, a term
applied to German scientists who came to the United States after World
War II under a contract with the War Department. (The space flight
scientist, Wernher von Braun, was another Paperclip scientist.)
Lindenberg arrived in the U.S. with Hubertus Strughold, former head of
the Luftwaffe Institute for Aviation Medicine in Berlin. They proceeded
to Randolph Field, Texas, where they did research from 1947 until 1950.
Lindenberg's family remained in Germany, supported by the U.S.
government, as agreed upon in the Paperclip contract. When the contract
expired, Lindenberg went to Mexico briefly in order to re-enter the
U.S. as a "landed" immigrant, which he could not do under the
contract.[5]"
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