In the 1970s, German foreign correspondent
Karl Brugger met "Tatunca Nara", who told him of the history of Akakor, an underground city below the
Amazon rainforest. Brugger was convinced and wrote "The Chronicle of Akakor“, published in 1976. Still working as a jungle guide, Tatunca Nara led tourists and adventurers looking for pyramids and the underground city, but questions were raised after several of his clients went missing: John Reed from the US in 1980, Herbert Wanner of Switzerland in 1983, and Swede Christine Heuser in 1987. All disappeared in mysterious circumstances. In 1984, a skull was found by Swiss tourists which could be identified by forensic analysis as Herbert Wanner. In the same year, Brugger was shot and killed by an unknown assailant in the streets of
Rio de Janeiro. The German Police believe Tatunca was behind the killing. In 1990, German adventurer
Rüdiger Nehberg and film producer
Wolfgang Brög tricked Tatunca into taking them on an expedition, during which his story began to unravel. The result was an hour-long documentary
Das Geheimnis des Tatunca Nara ('The Mystery of Tatunca Nara'), shown on the
ARD network in 1991. Nara stated, "I've killed many people, but I was a soldier and they were carrying weapons. I'm not innocent. But I didn't kill those three, as they've accused me of doing." ==References==