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Last update - 00:00 26/01/2007

German panel rules against returning poster art stolen by Nazis

By The Associated Press

BERLIN - A special German panel ruled Thursday against returning a valuable collection of rare posters stolen by the Nazis to the son of the original owner.

Peter Sachs was only a year old in 1938, when his father's collection of 12,500 posters was seized, and his family fled Germany.

Sachs sought to have the collection returned to the family, but the panel ruled against him, citing a letter from the man's father and a 1960s-era compensation payment as grounds for keeping them in Germany.

Sachs was "extremely disappointed" with the decision, his attorney Gary Osen said.

Sachs, 69, had been invited to address the panel in an effort to win the return of what remains of the collection: some 4,300 posters with an estimated value of between $10 million and $50 million. The posters are held by Berlin's German Historical Museum.

It was not clear what legal action Sachs might take, Osen said. His father, Hans Sachs, died in 1974. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the German Historical Museum inherited the collection from its East German counterpart in 1990.

The museum maintains that since Hans Sachs received compensation of DM 225,000 (approximately $50,000 at the time) from the West German government in 1961, the posters should remain in its collection.

Sachs' main argument was that the compensation was paid when it was assumed the collection was destroyed in the war, and that once his father found out that part of it had survived, he started trying to get access to it in the East German museum where it ended up.

However, the commission cited a letter dated 1966 in which Hans Sachs expressed to a West German friend that he viewed the payment as appropriate compensation. Sachs testified behind closed doors before the panel, which was set up in 2003 under an agreement among federal, state and local governments under Jutta Limbach, a former chief justice of Germany's Federal Constitutional Court.

The panel's mandate is to mediate in disputes involving art looted by the Nazis from Jewish and other owners and to make recommendations. The Nazis looted an estimated 150,000 pieces of art from Western Europe during World War II and some 500,000 pieces from Eastern and Central Europe.



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