World
Top attorney supports claim for art seized during WWII
2010-May-21 07:54:06

LOS ANGELES - California's attorney general filed a brief with the US Supreme Court on Wednesday in support of a Connecticut woman who wants a Pasadena museum to return two 500-year-old paintings seized by Nazis during World War II.

Attorney General Jerry Brown filed a friend-of-the-court brief asking the court to consider an appeal by Marei von Saher of Greenwich, Conn., who sued the Norton Simon Museum for the paintings in 2007.

The pair of 16th-century wood panels by German artist Lucas Cranach the Elder was seized from von Saher's relative, owned for a time by Nazi leader Hermann Goering and purchased 40 years ago by the museum. In 2007, the paintings were valued at $24 million.

They feature Adam and Eve, and might have been the inspiration for the title sequence of ABC's Desperate Housewives.

Brown's brief argued that California law extending the statute of limitations for heirs of Holocaust victims beyond the usual three-year limit that would apply to von Saher.

A trial court in Los Angeles tossed out the case, ruling that the law was unconstitutional because it interferes with the federal government's authority over foreign policy.

Brown argued there is no conflict between the federal government conducting foreign policy and the state regulating museums and galleries, which he said is a traditional state responsibility.

Von Saher's claim doesn't try to "redress the wartime wrongs of foreign governments," wrote Brown, a former governor who is running for the job again.

The lawsuit is against a museum with no ties to the Holocaust or the Nazi regime.

Associated Press

(China Daily 05/21/2010 page10)

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