S. 1884119th CongressSenate Bill

Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act of 2025

Signed into law

This bill permanently extends and expands judicial authority under the Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act of 2016. The law allows and establishes procedures for civil claims and causes of action to recover artwork and other property lost between 1933 and 1945 because of Nazi persecution. Among the changes, the bill removes the deadline for filing civil claims or causes of action. Currently, the filing deadline is December 31, 2026. (Claims must still be filed within six years of the claimant's discovery of the property in question.) The bill permits courts to exercise jurisdiction over civil claims or causes of action against a foreign state without regard to the nationality or citizenship of the alleged victim. The art or property at issue must still have a connection to the foreign state's commercial activities in the United States. Additionally, the bill authorizes nationwide service of process, which allows courts to exercise personal jurisdiction over defendants in any judicial district where they may be found, reside, have an agent, or transact business. Finally, the bill limits the defenses that may be asserted against civil claims or causes of action, including by prohibiting defenses based on the passage of time, including equitable defenses such as laches (i.e., unreasonable delays); and discretionary bases for dismissal that are unrelated to the merits of the claim, including international comity (i.e., deference to the laws of other countries). These changes apply to pending and future civil claims or causes of action.

Introduced May 22, 2025Last action Mar 16, 2026
Introduced in SenateMay 22, 2025
Reported by CommitteeNov 6, 2025
Passed SenateDec 10, 2025
Passed HouseMar 16, 2026
Signed into LawApr 13, 2026
Show change summary

There are no substantive policy changes between these two versions. The Engrossed in Senate and Enrolled Bill versions are identical in all material respects, containing the same provisions regarding Nazi-looted art recovery, elimination of time-based legal defenses, foreign sovereign immunity protections, and nationwide service of process.

The President has signed this bill. It is now the law of the land.

What changed in the latest version · AI-generated

There are no substantive policy changes between these two versions. The Engrossed in Senate and Enrolled Bill versions are identical in all material respects, containing the same provisions regarding Nazi-looted art recovery, elimination of time-based legal de…

Summary compares to previous version · Enrolled Bill on Apr 17, 2026

Who introduced this

John Cornyn

John Cornyn

Republican

U.S. Senator · TX

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