Germany to appeal US case involving Nazi art sale
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German officials have signaled that they will appeal a decision by a U.S. judge in a case involving art allegedly looted by the Nazis.
The judge ruled that the heirs of Nazi-era Jewish art dealers can sue Germany in an American court over an alleged violation of international law.
The case involves medieval relics valued at more than $250 million. The heirs of the art dealers say their relatives were forced to sell the relics in 1935 in a coerced transaction.
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Germany argues that the sale was voluntary and tried to get the case dismissed under a law that exempts foreign states from being sued in the U.S.
Attorneys for Germany and the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation filed a notice of appeal Friday in U.S. District Court in Washington.