Here's a quick article on the legal, moral and historical case for seizing Russia's state money currently frozen in western banks to rebuild Ukraine. Worth reading thru.
"Last month, the leaders of every state in the European Union, hosting millions of Ukrainian refugees, announced that the E.U. will "support Ukraine's reconstruction, for which we will strive to use frozen and immobilized Russian assets in accordance with EU and international law." They added measures to trace all those assets in their countries. Canada has already enacted its own legislation to move ahead."
"Governments would have plenty of legal justification for moving ahead. On Nov. 14, 2022, the United Nations formally recognized that Russia must "bear the legal consequences of all of its internationally wrongful acts, including making reparation for the injury, including any damage, caused by such acts." The United Nations called for creation of an institution, now, to implement this compensation."
"In state action against another state's property, there are no due process concerns. Russia is not a "person" under the U.S. Constitution, and the property being taken is not "private." There is no sovereign immunity issue, because this is state-on-state; there are no private litigants."
REPARATIONS