The symbols on the car.
The scene shown on this picture cannot show the events at Mogilev. As I already made clear, the building was covered with white plaster and had a foundation block. Moreover, one of the two hoses we had brought with us was much thicker than the other one. The vehicles used at Mogilev did not stand parallel to, but perpendicular to, the wall of the house. To the best of my remembrance, the hose did not have a support. I am unable to identify the vehicles in the picture as vehicles of the RKPA [Reichspolizeiamt]. The RKPA did not have any trucks at all. I do not know the license plates of the vehicles, in particular, I cannot explain the tactical sign on the platform of the truck. I do not know this sign.
After a second look at the pictures, I wish to point out that the window walled up with bricks sharply stood out against the wall of the house, which was covered with white plaster, and looked abominably ugly. Finally I did not see anybody taking pictures.
In my opinion these pictures were not taken during the action in Mogilev. I only remember a connecting piece and a hose. I also believe that the boards lying before the wall and the post which can be seen on the picture did not exist at Mogilev. Furthermore, I remember that only the window was walled up with bricks and that the rest of the building was not made of bricks. Finally, I think that in Mogilev the vehicle stood further away from the house and that the position of the connecting piece [in the wall of the house] was lower. The license plates of the vehicles visible in the picture are unknown to me, this means that I do not know these license plates. […]
My memory of the action in Mogilev strongly differs from the scenes in these pictures. Therefore, I think that these pictures do not show the action in Mogilev. The facility shown on the photographs seems to be quite sophisticated whereas the facilty used at the action in Mogilev was clearly provisional.
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
I suppose it would be equally easy for the Soviets to paint relevant symbols on the back of vehicles as it would be for them to relocate the vehicles (for a propaganda film). Either option seems plausible and perfectly within available means.fireofice wrote: ↑Fri Aug 08, 2025 8:13 pmThe symbols on the car.
https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... ssing.html
This seems convincing to me. It's the same technique I would use. Their annotations are unhelpful, but the wall's features do appear to line up. Here's my go at it:fireofice wrote: ↑Fri Aug 08, 2025 9:18 am What do you make of Sergey's analysis?
https://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot ... ng_23.html
Or, hear me out, they shot their 'recreation' at the wrong building on the grounds...Callafangers wrote: ↑Sat Aug 09, 2025 12:36 am I think this goes hand-in-hand with Stubble's points above, though... it would appear this staged gassing at the brick buildings was not part of the 'Mogilev test gassing' narrative at all, per Widmann and Schmidt... which can only mean one thing: a new 'gassing' discovery!![]()
were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
On closer review of some different stills in the video, I should concede that the panel of bricks in the video may be closer to ten short-bricks across than I initially interpreted. It's difficult to say for certain because the vertical line on the left is not clearly visible in any of the shots. But here's my latest count and given my best estimate of where the line on the left lies (still slightly less than ten short-bricks across, but arguably close enough):Wetzelrad wrote: ↑Sat Aug 09, 2025 1:37 am I used perspective shift on a screengrab from the video, and nothing else. Callafangers's criticisms above are reasonable but not convincing. It isn't merely that the bricks are in a standard arrangement. Some of the rows of bricks are misaligned, yet they match in the images. Beside that, the darker bricks match, although it is hard to tell with all the damage and mess on the wall.
Well, I'm not going to draw on it, but here is what my comparison looks like side-by-side in better quality.Callafangers wrote: ↑Sat Aug 09, 2025 5:35 am Regarding the general pattern of bricks, can you specify or highlight which specific bricks you note as "misaligned" (i.e. the masonry actually being uneven)? It looks pretty consistent to me but perhaps I've overlooked something.
Yes. Well, the repetition is to be expected going sideways, so maybe that lends some support to the idea that this could be another window to the left or right on the same wall. But the pattern itself and its height are pieces of identifying information.Callafangers wrote: ↑Sat Aug 09, 2025 5:35 am From the bricks that can be made out in the [grainy, low quality] institution photo, we can see it there, more than once:
The thing is: this is a tiled pattern -- it repeats over and over again, exactly the same each time:
Yes. You can see in the "gassing" shot that the mortar appears black in that area, and it's at the correct height: the 12th layer below the bottom of the window. Even in that state I see it as supporting evidence. If they rebuilt the window then I guess they would rebuild this ledge too.Callafangers wrote: ↑Sat Aug 09, 2025 5:35 am Moreover, as shown in the second-to-last image above, it is completely clear that the protruding ledge pointed out earlier is not of the same brickwork. The only charitable interpretation is that it has been rebuilt at some point:
I'm reasonably confident this is the right location based on everything combined. Maybe you could expect to find two buildings with brickwork this similar, but for both to be alleged to be Mogilev is too much.Callafangers wrote: ↑Sat Aug 09, 2025 5:35 am I am quite open to the possibility they are the same location -- after all, if I were the Soviets, I would certainly prefer to develop propaganda imagery at the same location I'm alleging such events to have occurred -- but I think we all have witnessed the "noble victors" be sloppier than this in the past, so I think it's worth still applying careful scrutiny to even the claim that this is the same building. As for now, I remain skeptical.
Fair play, your side-by-side is most helpful. There are now a few specific features that stand out to me as matching. The bricks alone aligning were not convincing but there are also some blemishes/indentations that I think overall push it in the direction of a matching location (too many "strange coincidences"), although it still doesn't explain why they reconstructed the ledge at the bottom... however it looks like an entire street was also added there, and given the poor condition of the bricks on the early 'gassing' ledge, it could have been a simple improvement (German? Soviet?).Wetzelrad wrote: ↑Sat Aug 09, 2025 7:38 am I'm reasonably confident this is the right location based on everything combined. Maybe you could expect to find two buildings with brickwork this similar, but for both to be alleged to be Mogilev is too much.
Here is a different photo of the place that I didn't notice until now. Not part of the video, or is it? Less contrast. Romanov used a version of this photo in his comparison.
On second look, I don't think what I describe here is actually the case -- most of what I thought was bullet/impact dust and damage may actually just be the light and shadows from trees above, which is more apparent in the full view:Callafangers wrote:Additionally, the still image (the institute) was taken at war's end when the building is riddled with what appears to be hundreds of bullet impacts and explosive shrapnel dents/debris.