Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Murder victim's gravestone may be changed

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Murder victim's gravestone may be changed

    Peterborough Evening Telegraph, UK
    Aug 18 2004

    CRIME: Murder victim's gravestone may be changed


    THE name on the gravestone of a man brutally murdered in a field
    could be changed if detectives can contact his parents.


    Police have released a list of pseudonyms belonging to Hovhannes
    Armirian (43), from Armenia - the name attributed to him by his
    Belgian wife.

    However, in the asylum-seeking community of East Anglia, Mr Armirian
    was more commonly known as Sarko.

    And after delving into his past, detectives have uncovered a long list
    of aliases, most of which are variations of Sarkis Matewosjan.

    That list has been passed to newspapers in eastern Europe, in the
    hope of discovering both Mr Armirian's true identity and his parents.

    If detectives are successful, the inscription on the wooden cross in
    Eastfield cemetery, Eastfield Road, Peterborough, which originally
    read Male Unknown, could be changed for a third time.

    The bid to find the Upton murder victim's true identity is not a part
    of the murder investigation.

    A 26-year-old man, previously arrested on suspicion of murdering Mr
    Armirian, whose smouldering body was found shot, stabbed and set
    alight in a field, in Upton near Peterborough, remains in care,
    mentally unfit to be questioned.

    However, Detective Inspector Bert Deane, who has led the 20-month
    investigation, said: "I feel it is necessary to find out the full
    background of the victim.

    "That is something we have always wanted to do, even after we found
    his wife in Belgium. Whenever you have a murder victim you want to
    make sure all his next of kin know what has happened to him."
Working...
X