Comprehensive Holocaust Accountability in Insurance Act
Summary
This bill, introduced in 2003, would allow individual states to require insurance companies to disclose detailed information regarding policies held by Holocaust victims during the era of the Second World War. Under this legislation, insurers would have to certify whether policy proceeds were paid to beneficiaries, distributed to charities, or remain unpaid. Additionally, the bill would establish a federal legal pathway for Holocaust survivors and their heirs to sue specific foreign insurance companies to recover unpaid claims, provided the legal action is filed within ten years of the bill’s enactment.
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