Under Landmark Ruling, Germany Must Now Defend Nazi-Looted Art Claims in U.S. Court
WASHINGTON (March 31, 2017)- The United States District Court for the District of Columbia has ruled that claims over the famed Guelph Treasure can proceed against Germany in a United States court. This is the first time Germany will have to defend itself in the U.S. against allegations of looted Nazi art and artifacts. The claims arise out of the 1935 forced sale by a consortium of Jewish art dealers to Hermann Goering’s minions of the famed collection of medieval artifacts known as the Guelph Treasure. The claims were filed by clients of Sullivan & Worcester LLP against the Federal Republic of Germany and the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation (the Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz, or SPK). The court rejected the Defendants’ arguments that they are immune from suit and held that the Plaintiffs’ claims can be considered a taking of property in violation of international law for the purpose of evaluating the court’s jurisdiction over Germany and the SPK.. Jed Leiber, Alan Philipp, and Gerald Stiebel may now proceed to litigate their claims for their property’s rightful return. Leiber, Philipp, and Stiebel are also represented by S&W’s co-counsel in this matter, Markus Stötzel and Mel Urbach, experienced counselors in the return of Nazi-looted art who have been fighting this case for over eight years and who decried Germany continuing to defend the Nazis’ and Herman Goering’s theft from Jews.
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Topics:
Nazi-looted art,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act,
Mel Urbach,
SPK,
Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz,
Hermann Goering,
FSIA,
expropriation exception”,
NS Raubkunst,
J.S. Goldschmidt,
Markus Stötzel,
Saemy Rosenberg,
Adolf Hitler,
Federal Republic of Germany,
Zacharias Hackenbroch,
Nicholas M. O'Donnell,
Welfenschatz,
I. Rosenbaum,
Paul Körner,
Wannsee Conference
Just as it appeared that the first trial in years would begin next month on a claim of Nazi-looted art, the much publicized Von Saher case has come to an end with a judgment that entered yesterday. The U.S. District Court awarded the Norton Simon Museum summary judgment on the claims to ownership of Adam and Eve by Lucas Cranach the Elder, ending pending further appeal a nearly decade-old litigation. Over the years, the Von Saher case has made new law about statutes of limitations, constitutional law, and the scope of U.S. foreign policy as it impacts the courts. Like the Cassirer case last year, it is a bitter blow for the claimants who labored for years to recover the paintings and for whom it appeared their day in court had arrived. This is all the more so because there was no dispute in the briefing that the paintings had been expropriated by Hermann Göring’s rapacious henchman.
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Topics:
Norton Simon Museum,
Alois Miedl,
Jacques Goudstikker,
Nazi-looted art,
Hermann Goering,
NS Raubkunst,
Restitution,
Marei Von Saher,
World War II
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Topics:
Maria Altmann,
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung,
National Socialists,
Third Reich,
artdaily.org,
Reuters,
United States Supreme Court,
Gestapo,
Haaretz,
Deutschlandradio. Deutsche Presse Agentur,
Robin Young,
the Guardian,
The Art Newspaper,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act,
The Wall Street Journal,
Deutsche Welle,
Santa Fe,
KRQE News 13,
the Observer,
Markus Stoetzel,
Die Erle,
Mel Urbach,
Nazis,
Advisory Commission,
3SAT,
ZDF,
Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz,
Washington DC,
Hermann Goering,
Private Wealth,
Restitution,
Sullivan & Worcester LLP,
Here & Now,
Gerald Stiebel,
World War II,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities,
flight tax,
Süddeutsche Zeitung,
Adolf Hitler,
United States District Court,
The New York Times,
Federal Republic of Germany,
BBC News Europe,
Alan Phillip,
Welfenschatz,
NPR,
PrivateArtInvestor,
ArtNet news
I filed yesterday a new civil action against the Federal Republic of Germany and the Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz (the SPK, which is responsible the administration of the Berlin museums, among other things) in the United States District Court in Washington, DC. You can read the Complaint here. The lawsuit seeks the immediate restitution to my clients of the collection held by the SPK known as the Welfenschatz, or as it is referred to in English, the Guelph Treasure. My clients Gerald Stiebel and Alan Phillip are the blood relatives and successors to the consortium of Jewish art dealers who were threatened and forced by the National Socialist government into selling the Welfenschatz in 1935.
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Topics:
Maria Altmann,
National Socialists,
Third Reich,
Philipp v. Federal Republic of Germany et al. 15-c,
United States Supreme Court,
Gestapo,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act,
Markus Stoetzel,
Mel Urbach,
Nazis,
Advisory Commission,
Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz,
Washington DC,
Hermann Goering,
Restitution,
Sullivan & Worcester LLP,
Gerald Stiebel,
World War II,
flight tax,
Adolf Hitler,
United States District Court,
Federal Republic of Germany,
Alan Phillip,
Welfenschatz
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Topics:
Maria Altmann,
National Socialists,
Third Reich,
Philipp v. Federal Republic of Germany et al. 15-c,
United States Supreme Court,
Gestapo,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act,
Markus Stoetzel,
Mel Urbach,
Nazis,
Advisory Commission,
Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz,
Washington DC,
Hermann Goering,
Restitution,
Sullivan & Worcester LLP,
Gerald Stiebel,
World War II,
Foreign Sovereign Immunities,
flight tax,
Adolf Hitler,
United States District Court,
Federal Republic of Germany,
Alan Phillip,
Welfenschatz