CN
21 Feb 2025, 15:15 GMT+10
WASHINGTON (CN) - The Supreme Court on Friday barred the families of Holocaust victims from using U.S. courts to hold Hungary accountable for stealing Jews' belongings while transporting them to death camps.
Heirs of Holocaust victims sued Hungary and its state-owned railway, Magyar Allamvasutak Zrt or MAV, over collaboration with the Nazis to exterminate Hungarian Jews and expropriate their property. They say MAV aided in the Hungarian government's effort by stealing Hungarian Jews' belongings and transporting them to death camps.
'Foreign nations have immunity from such litigation unless the stolen property is exchanged for goods connected to the U.S. economy. Using what's known as a commingling theory, the victims' families tried to link the stolen property to other government funds.
Hungary maintained that the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act blocked the lawsuit. The nation compared the families' lawsuit to a European capital trying to adjudicate claims for the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.
The decade-long legal battle landed at the Supreme Court after the D.C. Circuit ruled that the lawsuit could proceed. During oral arguments in December, however, the justices expressed concern that doing so would upend international norms.
Source: Courthouse News Service
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