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LA: Road rage suspect caught in Armenia

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  • LA: Road rage suspect caught in Armenia

    Road rage suspect caught in Armenia
    By Jason Kandel, Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Daily News
    Nov 12 2004

    One of the FBI's most wanted fugitives has been captured and returned
    to Los Angeles four years after fleeing to Armenia after killing a
    man during a vicious road rage incident in Universal City, authorities
    said Thursday.

    Shahen Keshishian, 32, a former truck driver from Burbank and a U.S.
    citizen, was arrested this week by Armenian authorities at his
    apartment in Yerevan, the country's capital.

    FBI agents and Glendale police, who were in the country on unrelated
    business, located Keshishian after detectives in the Los Angeles
    Police Department's North Hollywood Division asked for assistance
    tracking him down.

    They quickly located him and informed Armenian authorities, who
    arrested him for overstaying his visa. Keshishian was promptly handed
    over to U.S. authorities.

    "I am pleased as punch. I am just so elated," said LAPD Detective
    Martin Pinner of the North Hollywood Division's homicide unit, who
    returned from Armenia on Wednesday with the suspect.

    "This arrest, I do believe, came as a result of policemen talking
    to policemen, and massive cooperation with other agencies in two
    different countries."

    LAPD Deputy Chief Ronald Bergmann, who oversees the LAPD's Valley
    Bureau, praised the work of North Hollywood Division detectives.

    "This is an example, once again, of how we do police work in the
    Valley. We try to always get our man. North Hollywood did a great
    job putting it all together."

    FBI officials said the arrest was a warning to criminals who have
    fled the country.

    "This arrest should send the message to individuals who flee to
    Armenia and other countries that it's not a safe haven," said FBI
    spokeswoman Laura Eimiller.

    Keshishian has been charged with murder and is expected to appear in
    court Nov. 24. He is being held at the Twin Towers Jail in lieu of
    $1 million bail.

    He is accused of running down freelance film editor Michael Craven,
    44, of Canoga Park with a black Chevrolet Suburban on April 29, 2000,
    after the men became involved in a road rage confrontation along the
    Hollywood Freeway.

    Craven had been driving on the freeway after dinner with a friend when
    several men in their 20s pulled up in the black Suburban and threw
    eggs. One of the drivers had apparently cut in front of the other.

    Authorities say Craven pulled to the side of the freeway just south
    of Barham Boulevard to confront the suspect, and the Suburban driver
    stopped behind him. A passenger in the Suburban then threw a beer
    bottle at Craven's Jeep.

    Police said that after Craven got out of his Jeep, the Suburban was
    seen backing up, then driving forward, running Craven over. He died
    hours later.

    Minutes after the incident, Keshishian was ticketed for speeding,
    but police did not connect him with the earlier road-rage case. A
    month later, officials issued a $25,000 reward for his capture and
    released a composite sketch.

    Three months after the killing, Keshishian was listed as one of the
    FBI's most wanted.

    The Suburban was a key clue that eventually led to the international
    manhunt, Pinner said. An unidentified person had fraudulently bought
    the SUV and loaned it to Keshishian the night of the murder.

    "We researched every Suburban purchased in the time frame around the
    murder," Pinner said. "We looked for him all over the U.S. with the
    help of the FBI and tons of agencies. Boston, New York. I spoke to
    people in Texas. We did a lot of work."

    Detectives continue to search for the passengers in the SUV that night.

    "It was the passenger throwing the stuff at the victim," Pinner said.
    "It's a felony. The passenger is also going to jail. I'd love to
    figure out who he is."
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