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Austria’s highest court hears dispute over home where Hitler was born

Lawyer accuses government of acting ‘like a club’ over bid to seize residence after owner refused to sell for reported low offer

Adolf Hitler's birth house in Braunau am Inn, Austria. (AP Photo/Kerstin Joensson)
Adolf Hitler's birth house in Braunau am Inn, Austria. (AP Photo/Kerstin Joensson)

VIENNA (AP) — A lawyer for the owner of the house where Adolf Hitler was born is disputing the government’s right to take possession of the property in Austria’s highest court, saying authorities are using the measure “like a club” because his client refused purchase offers from authorities that were too low.

The challenge is in response to a government bill to take the house after owner Gerlinde Pommer refused to sell it.

Hitler was born in 1889 in the house in Braunau am Inn, a town on the German border. The government wants to remodel the property’s facade to reduce its draw as a shrine for admirers of the Nazi dictator and to offer it to an agency that runs workshops for disabled people.

Ahead of the first day of Constitutional Court hearings Thursday, lawyer Gerhard Lebitsch questioned the timing of the government’s move so long after World War II, noting that “they could have neutralized the site 40-50 years ago.”

Memorial stone outside of Adolf Hitler's birthplace in Braunau am Inn, Austria. (CC BY-SA, Anton Kurt, Wikipedia)
Memorial stone outside of Adolf Hitler’s birthplace in Braunau am Inn, Austria. (CC BY-SA, Anton Kurt, Wikipedia)

While the price offered by the state has not been disclosed, Lebitsch suggested it was too low, describing the offer as “half-hearted.”

In court, officials for the government argued that the state decided to seize the house after the owner refused to make alternations needed for use for workshops. They also said the state was confronted with unjustified rent increases while leasing the building previously.

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