On 19 January 1939, the
Gestapo went to the "widowed Jewess" to "seize cultural property" under the guise of protecting it. Caspari's residence at the Hotel Continental and art warehouse on Briennerstraße 52 were ransacked and the
Nazis looted 22 paintings, 140 books and numerous prints and drawings. The stolen art was then given as a "gift" to the
Bavarian National Museum, the State Library and the State Graphic Collection . Before she was deported by the Nazis and murdered, Caspari managed to get her sons to safety in London. From 1938, she desperately tried to join her two sons, however her requests for permission to emigrate were repeatedly rejected by the German authorities. On 20 November 1941, Anna Caspari was deported to Wehrmacht-occupied Lithuania during the first episodes of mass deportations of Jewish citizens from Munich. She was murdered on 25 November in Kaunas. Her mother Olga Naphtali was deported to
Theresienstadt. == Restitution claims ==