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The daughter of the Nazi fugitive is under house arrest after a search of her property could not find a long -lost painting.
Prosecutor say that looted art was no longer in the houseBut the raids on other properties related to the family have discovered other works that may have been stolen during the war.
Portrait of the Lady of the Italian Master Giuseppe Gisandy went missing over 80 years before she was Last month on the real estate agent site noticedWhere the photo showed that he hung in a house that belonged to the late father Patricia Kadgiene, Friedrich Kadgiene.
Kadgiene Senior was the main advisor to Herman Goring, who robbed thousands of works from all nazi Europe.
Patricia Kadgiene and her husband were ordered to remain under house arrest for three days, starting Monday, local media reports. According to a court official cited by local media, they will be interrogated for the obstacle to finding a picture.
The couple is expected to face the hearings on Thursday, where it is likely to be charged with “hiding thefts in the context of genocide,” the official added.
The couple insists that they are legal owners of a work of art they inherited, according to the Argentine newspaper La Nacion.
The lawyer of his daughter Kadgina, Carlos Muros, told the local newspaper La Capital that the couple would cooperate with the authorities. However, the prosecutor’s office said on Tuesday that the works of art were not yet transferred.
During the painting, a search for a picture was carried out, the prosecutor’s office said.
During these searches, two paintings and a number of images and engravings from the 19th century were found in Ms. Kadgiene’s sister’s house, La Capital, and will be analyzed to determine whether they are the objects stolen during the war.
The picture first noticed on the Internet, a portrait of the lady, was one of the collections of the Amsterdam of the art dealer Jacques Gaudstker, most of which was forcibly sold by the Nazis after his death. It is listed further Database of art stolen by Nazis.
Peter Shutten from the Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad (AD), which broke the original story of the appearance of a long -lost work of art, stated that there was evidence of “the paintings was removed shortly or after reporting on the media.”
“Now there is a big rug with horses and some natural scenes that the police say it seems that there was something else to hang there.”
After the photo appeared, one of the sisters told Dutch paper that they did not know what they wanted from her, and what painting they were saying.
The lawyers on the Hitstikuker estate said they would make every effort to return the picture.
Some works belonging to the hourly were extracted in Germany after the war and exhibited at the Amsterdam exhibition as part of the Dutch National Collection.
His only that displaced the heir, daughter -in -law Marey von Saher said that her family “aims to return every artistic work robbed from the Jacque collection and restore the heritage.”
According to AD, in 2006, she captured 202 works.