Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Judge approves landmark insurance settlement to benefit Armenians

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

  • Judge approves landmark insurance settlement to benefit Armenians

    Associated Press
    July 30 2004


    Judge approves landmark insurance settlement to benefit Armenians

    TIM MOLLOY
    Associated Press


    LOS ANGELES - A judge approved a landmark $20 million settlement in a
    lawsuit seeking unpaid life insurance benefits for descendants of
    Armenians killed nearly 90 years ago in the Turkish Ottoman Empire.

    Attorneys for the plaintiffs said they filed the class-action suit to
    raise awareness of the deaths as well as to win money from New York
    Life Insurance Co.

    They contend that 1.5 million Armenians were killed in an act of
    genocide by the Turkish Ottoman Empire. Turkey rejects the genocide
    claim and maintains that Armenians were killed in civil unrest during
    the collapse of the empire.

    The legal agreement approved by U.S. District Court Judge Christina
    A. Snyder is believed to be the first ever in connection with the
    disputed event.

    "As lawyers and descendants of victims of the genocide, we were able
    to bring to court a lawsuit that brings some recognition of the
    genocide," said attorney Brian S. Kabateck, who, like co-counsel Mark
    Geragos, is Armenian-American.

    New York Life sold about 8,000 policies in the Ottoman Empire
    beginning in the 1880s, with less than half of those bought by
    Armenians. It stopped selling insurance there in 1915.

    The company said it located about one-third of the policyholders'
    descendants to pay benefits. The rest of the policies languished
    because the remaining heirs could not be found, the firm said.

    Under the agreement, $11 million will be set aside to pay claims by
    heirs of some 2,400 policyholders. About $3 million will go to
    Armenian charitable organizations.

    Another $2 million will be used for administrative costs, with
    anything not spent on expenses going to the charities. The remaining
    $4 million will cover attorneys' fees.

    One of the plaintiffs, 89-year-old Martin Marootian, will receive
    $250,000 because of his work for decades to bring about the lawsuit.

    His attorneys said he has also suffered because of criticism from
    others in the Armenian-American community who opposed the settlement
    as insufficient.

    Geragos said some of the critics wrongly believe the case involves
    reparations for the killings rather than insurance payments.

    Marootian was born in New York in 1915 - the year that Armenians
    contend the Turks began the executions to punish Armenians for
    allegedly helping the invading Russian army during World War I.

    France and Russia are among 15 countries, along with a United Nations
    human rights panel, that have recognized the genocide. The United
    States has not made such a declaration.
Working...
X