No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsCrimeHuman rights group asks Costa Rica to close down shop that displayed...

Human rights group asks Costa Rica to close down shop that displayed Nazi collectibles

A U.S. human rights organization wants the Costa Rican government to close down a San Pedro shop that sells Nazi items.

The Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center, which keeps tabs on anti-Semitism worldwide, sent Justice Minister Cecilia Sánchez Romero a request last week to close down a shop called Caza de Tesoros in San Pedro, east of San José, following reports that the store displays and sells Nazi collectibles including “soldier uniforms, helmets, medals, Hitler hero pins, Holocaust denial books and concentration camp prisoners’ clothing.”

The letter, signed by the center’s director of international relations, Shimon Samuels, and Latin America representative Ariel Gelblung, calls for an investigation into the shop’s owner, its suppliers, clients and possible ties to Nazi groups across Latin America.

“The shop could be closed under Organization of American States (OAS) provisions,” Samuels said in a news release on the organization’s website. He didn’t specify which provisions.

Gelblung said, “Materials on sale offend the memory of Hitler’s victims and provoke violence against Jewish communities throughout Latin America.”

“Costa Rica’s long support for Israel and its well-established Jewish community require the immediate removal of this anti-Semitic emporium,” the organization stated.

Minister Sánchez confirmed that the Justice Ministry had received the petition last Sept. 2 in an email from the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s branch office in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Sánchez said her office submitted the request to government prosecutors so that they can determine whether there are grounds to proceed with a criminal case.

On Wednesday the Prosecutors’ Office said they had not received any request from the Justice Ministry regarding the business or its owner.

The Economy Ministry, through its press office, also said Wednesday that it had not received any petition to close the business and that, in any case, it had no power to do so unless the business is a tax debtor or dodger.

Steven Ferris, a San José lawyer and board member of The Tico Times’ parent company, said currently there are no specific laws in Costa Rica banning the sale or purchase of Nazi or anti-Semitic merchandise, therefore there appear to be no grounds for prosecuting the business owner.

Shop owner: It’s a private collection

The shop’s owner, Minor Blanco Villalobos, told The Tico Times his business was being targeted by a person who entered the store, took pictures of some of the German army and other Nazi objects and sent them to the Wiesenthal Center.

Blanco, who said he has master’s degrees in history and arts, said collectors from other countries often contact him to value antiques.

“The [Nazi] objects belong to an Italian collector from Verona who also has businesses in Costa Rica,” Blanco said. “He asked me to verify and value them. That’s the reason why these objects were on my shop. I’ve received requests to value and sell objects ranging from Mayan spearheads to Etruscan art pieces.”

He denied the collection includes concentration camp prisoners’ clothing or Holocaust denial books. He said it only includes military uniforms and said the books are German political books written before Hitler’s time as dictator, even before “Mein Kampf,” he explained.

Blanco said his shop mostly offers traditional antique objects: old coins, bank notes, books, toys, furniture, archaeological artifacts, pictures, sculptures, religious art and old Tico memorabilia. Blanco also owns military collectibles from the U.S., Japan, Italy, France and as well as some World War II items.

The shop owner said the bad publicity from the Wiesenthal Center had forced him to remove all the Nazi items from his store to avoid problems. “People in recent days contacted me through email and social media and told me some groups are commenting on at least two social media profiles about visiting my business to protest or even worse … and now I have to be extremely cautious to avoid attacks to my property,” he said.

Blanco said his store will remain open and that he only closed it for a few days this week to reorganize the objects on display, after removing the German collection.

Costa Rica Treasure Hunting
(Courtesy of Caza de Tesoros)

Trending Now

A Hole in the Road and a Hole in the Economy: Route 27’s Sinkhole Crisis

It opened on a Wednesday afternoon in late May, and within hours, it had swallowed part of one of the most important stretches of...

Keylor Navas Leads Pumas Into Liga MX Final Second Leg

Keylor Navas has Pumas UNAM one match from the Liga MX title after delivering the kind of performance Costa Rican fans have watched for...

Costa Rica Braces for Rain and Thunderstorms as Tropical Wave Moves Through

Costa Rica will see unstable weather from today through June 3, with warm mornings followed by afternoon and early-evening rain across much of pur...

Former Costa Rican President Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Acquitted After 25 Years

A Costa Rican court on Friday acquitted former President Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Echeverría of embezzlement in the long-running "Reaseguros" case, closing one of the...

The Grocery Delivery Service Expats in Costa Rica Keep Recommending

If you’ve lived in Costa Rica long enough, you know grocery shopping can be a half-day to full-day project.  Great things are abundant in Costa...

El Salvador Extends State of Exception for 51st Time

El Salvador's 51st extension of the state of exception took effect Sunday, May 31, and runs through June 29, keeping certain constitutional guarantees suspended...

Argentina’s Ugo Carabelli Joins Cerúndolo, Navone at Roland Garros

Camilo Ugo Carabelli outlasted American qualifier Emilio Nava 7-6(12-10), 6-3, 6-3 at Roland Garros on Monday, surviving a marathon opening tiebreak to advance to...

Costa Rica Crypto Bill Approved as Lawmakers Target Money Laundering Risks

Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly has approved a bill in second reading to regulate cryptocurrency-related service providers and bring them under stronger anti-money laundering oversight. The...

Costa Rica Opposition Defends Mining Ban as Crucitas Crisis Deepens

Four opposition factions in Costa Rica's Asamblea Legislativa have closed ranks against the executive branch's bid to reopen metallic open-pit mining in Crucitas, ratifying...
L. Arias
L. Arias
Reporter | The Tico Times |
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador

Live prediction market odds via Kalshi. Updates every 60 seconds.
Kalshi is available to US residents 18+. The Tico Times may earn a commission from new signups.

Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel