Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Glendale: Boxer killed in mob dispute

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

  • Glendale: Boxer killed in mob dispute

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Oct 12 2004

    Boxer killed in mob dispute

    Police seek man who fired shots in park
    By Jason Kandel,
    Staff Writer


    A professional boxer who aspired to be the Armenian "Rocky" was
    fatally shot by other members of an organized crime ring in a dispute
    over a credit-card scheme, officials said Monday.
    Arsen Aivazian, 30, of North Hollywood was killed about 9 p.m.
    Saturday at Valley Plaza Park, where members of a Russian-Armenian
    organized crime syndicate had gathered to settle a dispute over a
    fraud ring, authorities said.

    "It was an argument over criminal activities within the group," LAPD
    Detective Mike Coffey said. "Credit card, gas schemes. That's what it
    was over."

    Coffey said the men argued loudly in Armenian before Aivazian -- a
    professional welterweight -- threw a punch at one of them. That man
    then pulled a gun and shot Aivazian three times in the chest before
    the group fled in at least three vehicles.

    On Sunday, police located one of the getaway vehicles, which had been
    ditched in the 6400 block of Farmdale Avenue. The unidentified owner
    was questioned and released.

    Aivazian's family members in Fort Worth, Texas, said they were
    devastated by the news. They had nicknamed Aivazian "Rocky" because
    of his love for boxing.

    "This is a big loss," said his brother, Andranik Aivazian, 31, who
    was contacted by phone. "He was my little brother. We've never been
    apart."

    Aivazian emigrated with his family from Yerevan, Armenia, to
    Czechoslovakia, then to the United States. They settled in Fort
    Worth, where Aivazian got his professional boxing license in 1997.

    He trained with two-time world champion bantamweight boxer Paulie
    Ayala and Fort Worth trainer Vincent Reyes. Locally, he trained at
    the Wild Card Boxing Club in Hollywood.

    "He always put on a good fight," Reyes said. "He looked just like
    Rocky. He had the physique and everything. He had his sense of
    taste."

    While he was boxing he always had side jobs -- waiting tables,
    selling phone books, washing cars, "doing whatever he could to get
    his hands on money," Reyes said. But he added, "I can't see him in
    any organized crime or anything."
Working...
X