(JEWISH GROUP) Supreme Court majority appears skeptical of allowing Holocaust survivors to sue Hungary in US courts
A majority of the Supreme Court on Tuesday appeared skeptical that Holocaust victims and their families are permitted to haul Hungary into American courts to recover property stolen during World War II, with several justices fearing that would open the United States up to a flood of similar litigation from abroad.
More than a dozen victims of the Holocaust and their families have been fighting the Republic of Hungary and its national railway for nearly 15 years over whether they may continue their lawsuit in federal courts under a narrow exception to the general prohibition on suing foreign governments in the United States.
Hungary stole respondents property while forcing them onto cattle cars, Shay Dvoretzky, representing the families, told the Supreme Court during about 90 minutes of arguments. When Hungary then used the money it received from selling that property to buy equipment in the United States, it put into the United States property that had been exchanged for the expropriated property.
The appeal appeared likely to split the Supreme Court along nonideological lines, with both conservatives and liberals concerned about the implications of a decision for the families.
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