Many thanks to
doctor_fangeek for alerting me to this.
It seems that Jeff Eastin and the White Collar writers have taken quite a beating on Twitter over the origins of the Nazi treasure. Like me, the fans are very perturbed that Neal and Moz have no obvious regrets about taking art that was stolen from the Nazi's victims, Jewish or otherwise.
Back in March after the S2 finale,
jrosemary and I did a point-counterpoint in White Collar Fixation regarding this issue. I was outraged. I still am.
But apparently, the art was not stolen from individuals. Jim Campolongo has tweeted an explanation.
( Since this is potentially a huge spoiler, I've put it under the cut. )
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
It seems that Jeff Eastin and the White Collar writers have taken quite a beating on Twitter over the origins of the Nazi treasure. Like me, the fans are very perturbed that Neal and Moz have no obvious regrets about taking art that was stolen from the Nazi's victims, Jewish or otherwise.
Back in March after the S2 finale,
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
But apparently, the art was not stolen from individuals. Jim Campolongo has tweeted an explanation.
( Since this is potentially a huge spoiler, I've put it under the cut. )