I think that most of the handguns that came back here did so in a duffle bag with no papers cause the papers are pretty rare. But if you do have them they are a nice piece of history.
The ink on Germany's surrender papers probably wasn't even dry yet when we started cleaning out the V-2 plant. But the war was officially over when they signed it, so maybe that was the end of the capture paper thing also. Maybe that's why my uncle didn't get papers on this one; but I don't know for sure. Just wondering. P.S. I also have a nazi marked P-38 holster from my uncle. It's what the Luger came to the U.S. in. I think he traded something to another G.I. for the holster.