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Argentine authorities probe heirs of Nazi officials over allegedly looted art

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pdated on: September 2, 2025 / 2:34 PM EDT

     / CBS/AFP

    Fighting for the return of Nazi-looted art

    Argentine police are investigating a deceased Nazi's daughter and son-in-law after a 17th-century painting stolen from a Dutch Jewish art collector was spotted in a property ad before disappearing. The painting, believed to be "Portrait of a Lady" by Giuseppe Ghislandi, was recognized in a photo of a house for sale in Mar del Plata.

    The authenticity of the artwork cannot be confirmed until it is recovered, but it's thought to have been stolen from Amsterdam art dealer Jacques Goudstikker during World War II. Goudstikker died fleeing Nazi-occupied Netherlands in 1940. The painting was later linked to Friedrich Kadgien, a financial adviser to Adolf Hitler's right-hand man and an art aficionado who plundered paintings from Jewish-owned galleries.

    After the article was published, the image was removed from the real estate listing. Police found a tapestry of a horse hanging where the painting had been in the pictures. Four property searches failed to yield the artwork. Kadgien's daughter and son-in-law have been placed under house arrest and will appear in court to be charged.

    The prosecutor's office said investigators seized two other artworks from another Kadgien daughter's home, which appeared to be from the 1800s. The works will be analyzed to determine if they are linked to paintings stolen during World War II. Goudstikker's heirs are determined to recover the painting, listed on an international registry of missing artworks.

    Interpol and Argentine federal police are involved in the search for the artwork. Kadgien's daughter and son-in-law claim they inherited the artwork and are its rightful owners.

Argentine authorities investigate Nazi heirs over allegedly looted art in Buenos Aires.