Holy Shit.

Zor
Moderator: Edi
Good man!The mayor was not prepared to pass judgement on the villa owner, who is said to be in his 70s.
"Some people like steam trains, others like tanks,“ he pointed out.
I can offhand think of at least four german museums who are now probably racing to confirm their interest in the things.Joun_Lord wrote:I also hope the government isn't stupid enough to just destroy the tank.
"Who's that?"And for the mayor of Heikendorf, Alexander Orth, the find also came as no surprise.
"He was chugging around in that thing during the snow catastrophe in 1978,“ Orth told SZ.
The mayor was not prepared to pass judgement on the villa owner, who is said to be in his 70s.
They had better things to do, and he was helping - after him, the road was probably clean enough for others to drive.Eternal_Freedom wrote:That's one big damn cellar.
Also, it's kinda strange that this comes up now, and not after that Snow Catastrophe in 78 when people, y'know, saw him driving the damn thing.
He also apparently helped local farmers with plowing fields, though I question if the field would be any good after you drive a tank over it.LaCroix wrote:They had better things to do, and he was helping - after him, the road was probably clean enough for others to drive.Eternal_Freedom wrote:That's one big damn cellar.
Also, it's kinda strange that this comes up now, and not after that Snow Catastrophe in 78 when people, y'know, saw him driving the damn thing.
Also, rural Germans tend to assume that people doing huge, obvious things do have permission to do it.
The article mentions they were searching dudes place for stolen Nazi art, they must have found the tank and other things.Purple wrote:I wonder who reported him anyway. I mean, I know I wouldn't report him unless he fired on my car or something.
Meh, we had a 88, Flakvierling, a Bofors and fourteen tanks not to mention associated staff cars and equipment and that was just two fellows in rural Indiana.Thanas wrote: Also, the guy had a full 88. Geez.
I wouldn't be surprised if he is related to Meister Röhrich.
That's where the very smooth ground pressure curve produced by the interwoven road wheels would work out awesome. Just hope an inner one doesn't break.Thanas wrote: He also apparently helped local farmers with plowing fields, though I question if the field would be any good after you drive a tank over it.
The German government has no legitimate claim to it, as far as I can see. It was the property of Nazi Germany, and post-war Germany would not have been permitted to inherit it from their predecessors even if it had not been stolen. If anyone has a claim to it, it would be someone like the French or American government.LaCroix wrote:Also, usually, such war machinery is considered national property, no matter who found it, so he would need to provide documentation of purchase from Germany, or else it is considered stolen.
tl;dr. He probably found it somewhere and hid it from the authorities, ignoring that it is state property. It will find it's way into a museum.
Nope.Grumman wrote:The German government has no legitimate claim to it, as far as I can see. It was the property of Nazi Germany, and post-war Germany would not have been permitted to inherit it from their predecessors even if it had not been stolen. If anyone has a claim to it, it would be someone like the French or American government.LaCroix wrote:Also, usually, such war machinery is considered national property, no matter who found it, so he would need to provide documentation of purchase from Germany, or else it is considered stolen.
tl;dr. He probably found it somewhere and hid it from the authorities, ignoring that it is state property. It will find it's way into a museum.