39
Mostly False
Poland
Eugene Lazowski saved 8,000 Jews during the Holocaust by using dead typhus cells to make them test positive for the disease, which deterred Germans from deporting them to concentration camps.
Eugene Lazowski's actions during the Holocaust involved faking a typhus outbreak using dead typhus cells to prevent deportation to camps. However, evidence indicates that his efforts saved non-Jewish Poles, not Jews, due to Nazi policies. The operation was effective in creating fear of a typhus outbreak among Germans, leading to a decrease in deportations from the affected area.
Individual Claims
31
Mostly False
History
Polish doctor Eugene Lazowski saved 8,000 Jews during the Holocaust by injecting dead typhus cells into them.
Evidence indicates Lazowski's strategy involved faking a typhus outbreak to save people from deportation. However, he did not specifically save Jews this way, as confirmed by his own accounts.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
40
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
10
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
10
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
31
Evidence Summary
Evidence debunks the claim that Lazowski saved Jews; he saved non-Jewish Poles.
67
Mostly True
Medical
The injections allowed people to test positive for typhus despite being healthy.
Multiple sources confirm that Lazowski used dead typhus cells to make healthy people test positive, creating a false epidemic.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
70
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
80
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
60
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
67
Evidence Summary
Evidence supports that dead typhus cells were used to create false positives.
11
False
History
Germans were afraid of typhus because it was highly contagious.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
0
Source Quality Score
None
Source Quality Weight
0
Llm Reasoning Score
-1
Llm Reasoning Weight
100
Weighted Total
11
Evidence Summary
None
42
Mixed
History
Germans refused to deport those who tested positive for typhus to concentration camps.
Evidence shows deportations continued despite typhus outbreaks, but some individuals were quarantined to prevent spread, indicating partial correctness.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
40
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
50
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
30
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
42
Evidence Summary
Some individuals were not deported, but policy generally did not prevent deportations.
43
Mixed
History
Eugene Lazowski used dead typhus cells in his strategy to save Jews.
While Lazowski used dead typhus cells, evidence refutes the claim that it specifically saved Jews, focusing instead on local population protection.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
50
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
30
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
40
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
43
Evidence Summary
Lazowski used this method but did not specifically save Jews; he saved the local population.