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Ex-priest pleads guilty to tax fraud

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  • Ex-priest pleads guilty to tax fraud

    Albany Times Union, NY
    July 16 2004

    Ex-priest pleads guilty to tax fraud
    Albany-- Former pastor avoids prison time, again told to repay Troy
    church

    By BRENDAN LYONS, Staff writer
    First published: Friday, July 16, 2004

    A former priest who took more than $90,000 while he was pastor at an
    Armenian church in Troy was sentenced on federal charges this week to
    six months of home confinement and three years of probation.
    Megerdich Megerdichian, 48, who now lives in Cranston, R.I., was a
    priest at Holy Cross Armenian Apostolic Church for about 16 years
    until January 1998. In the mid-1990s, Megerdichian opened a bank
    account in which he deposited thousands of dollars in checks made out
    to the congregation.

    The deposits were made without the knowledge of a four-member church
    finance board, and Megerdichian withdrew money from the account for
    several years, beginning in 1995, to pay personal expenses.

    In federal court Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Lawrence E. Kahn
    heard from a church member who urged him to sentence Megerdichian to
    life in prison, according to federal authorities. But Megerdichian
    faced a maximum punishment of only about three years in prison and a
    fine of up to $250,000. In addition to home confinement and
    probation, Kahn fined him $20,000 and ordered him to repay the
    embezzled money to the church.

    Megerdichian was removed from ministry in 1998 and was required in
    2000 to repay the parish. It's not clear from court records if the
    money has been repaid. It totaled more than $93,000, including
    $82,000 in checks made out to the church.

    Megerdichian pleaded guilty to a single count of filing a false and
    fraudulent income tax return. The charge, which was part of a plea
    agreement, was based on his not having declared the income or having
    reported it to the Internal Revenue Service. Megerdichian paid
    $10,293 in restitution to the IRS, authorities said.

    Church finances were controlled by a four-member board during
    Megerdichian's tenure, officials said. They were signatories on all
    church accounts and were required to approve church expenditures.

    But from at least May 1995 until sometime in late 1997, those board
    members had no idea that the priest had established a private account
    at a Fleet Bank in Troy in which he deposited the thousands of
    dollars.
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