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  • Glendale: Russian-Armenian organized crime 'like the 1930s New Yorkm

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Oct 11 2004

    A new gang problem

    Russian-Armenian organized crime 'like the 1930s New York mob'


    By Jason Kandel
    Staff Writer


    GLENDALE -- It wasn't the price of cucumbers but murder that Eddy
    Gyulnazaryan and his pals were talking about that day back in March
    2001 in the backroom of his Atlas Pick pickle factory.

    Rival Russian-Armenian gangs were at war and Gyulnazaryan, a beefy
    40-year-old family man with the gift of gab, wanted some people
    killed.

    As he fired off several rounds into a stack of phone books,
    Gyulnazaryan made an offer that couldn't be refused -- a $5,000
    contract to "eliminate" a man who had gotten under his skin.

    What Gyulnazaryan didn't know was that one of the pals was wired. He
    had turned and become a confidential informant working with an
    organized crime task force that was able to use this information to
    win convictions of the ringleader and five others on charges of
    solicitation of murder.

    At least 14 murders, 100 attempted killings and seven kidnappings
    have been blamed on Russian-Armenian gangsters operating across the
    San Fernando Valley region since 2000. The groups are fueled by
    lucrative white collar frauds -- including credit card, immigration,
    auto insurance, cigarette tax evasion, identity theft, welfare and
    health care.

    "They're very much organized criminals. They're very violent. They're
    dangerous," said Glendale police Sgt. Steve Davey, who heads the
    Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force, comprising federal, state and
    local authorities. "They're not afraid of using violence to solve
    their disputes. They shoot up homes and cars. It's like the 1930s New
    York mob."

    According to court documents and interviews, Gyulnazaryan wanted to
    hire hit men to kill four unidentified men, two from Long Beach.
    There also was a plan to hire jailed Latino gang members to kill two
    of his rivals, Emil Airapetian 25, and Armen Sharopetrosian, 26, who
    were also in jail.

    Authorities said "there have been many documented shootings" between
    the rival Russian-Armenian gangs in recent years.

    Police said in court documents that they believed Gyulnazaryan's
    group was "heavily involved in credit card fraud, MediCal and
    Medicare fraud, check fraud, drug trafficking, extortion and numerous
    shootings, assaults and other violent crimes ... and have access to
    large sums of money obtained through their various criminal
    enterprises."

    A break in the case The FBI got their break when Gyulnazaryan asked
    one of his closest allies, with whom he had previously worked on auto
    insurance fraud scams, if he would carry out a hit.

    That man, who was not identified, had been an informant for the FBI
    before. From then on, he agreed to wear a wire and secretly record
    conversations among the group.

    Offers of up to $20,000 were made to "eliminate" members of rival
    criminal organizations. But the jailhouse killings proved too
    complicated to carry out.

    In March 2003, police raided the homes of Gyulnazaryan and his
    associates Gayk Tadevosyan, 40; Gagik Galoyan, 55; Anthony Armenta,
    25; Andranik Safaryan, 24; and Edgar Hatamian, 23. Gyulnazaryan
    pleaded no contest Thursday to solicitation of murder charges and was
    sentenced to 15 years in prison. The others pleaded no contest to
    solicitation of murder charges and were sentenced to prison terms
    ranging from three to nine years. Galoyan received a nine-year
    suspended prison sentence and five years' probation.

    Galoyan had grown up with Gyulnazaryan in Armenia and went into
    business with him at the pickle factory, which closed down two years
    ago.

    "These guys have come from Armenia. They have known each other for
    years. They have grown up with each other," said Galoyan's attorney,
    Fred Minassian. "My client is known in the Armenian community as an
    elder statesman. In no way is he a mobster."

    Gyulnazaryan's attorney, Michael Levin, said his client is not
    violent and did not head up an organized crime ring.

    "My client has got a big mouth. He likes to talk. But what the
    (police) got on tape makes him sound like Tony Soprano," he said.
    "He's a hard-working family man."

    Russian mob history Authorities said Russian mobs became more and
    more prevalent in the United States in the 1990s as people from
    former Soviet bloc countries began emigrating here. They settled in
    New York, Brighton Beach, Fla., and Los Angeles. Up to 6,000 people
    are connected with 15 loosely organized crime groups in the United
    States that include Ukrainians, Lithuanians and, locally, Armenians.

    In Glendale, where about a third of the 204,000 residents are
    Armenian, police estimate that there are about 500 Armenian criminals
    connected to organized crime.

    Police have been challenged in trying to crack the rings because of a
    lack of resources, a lack of familiarity with the culture and victims
    too afraid to report the crimes.

    Sukharenko Alexander, a senior fellow of the Organized Crime Study
    Center of the Far East State University, said Russian-Armenian
    syndicates are part of large international crime networks. They have
    seemingly infinite resources and escape routes to countries with no
    extradition treaties.

    "This allows them to launder huge amounts of money, smuggle drugs and
    stolen vehicles, and import criminals to carry out contract murders
    and fraud," Alexander said.

    Los Angeles County sheriff's Detective Alex Gilinets, who works the
    Major Crimes Bureau, said the groups are not always bound by strict
    rules or regulations like the old-time mobs and can be more violent.

    "It's, who can I make my next big buck with?" Gilinets said.

    Sara Vinson, a criminal intelligence analyst with the state Justice
    Department's Eurasian Organized Crime unit, said victims are too
    scared to come forward.

    "Their fear of organized crime groups is bigger than their fear of
    our criminal justice system," Vinson said. "A lot of them have family
    back home that they can't protect, and they have that hanging over
    their head."

    LAPD Detective Martin Pinner is having a hard time getting witnesses
    to come forward from a murder in North Hollywood. Karapet
    Ksadzhikyan, 50, was ambushed by two men in a suspected mob hit as he
    walked to his bread delivery truck outside his home in the 13000
    block of Archwood Street on Nov. 24.

    "No one cooperates," he said. "No one's saying anything. No one knows
    anything."

    Glendale police and city officials, including Mayor Bob Yousefian,
    himself an Iranian-Armenian-American, has been pushing for more cops,
    especially Armenian-speaking officers, to fight the scourge.

    But they face an uphill battle. Many deny there is an organized crime
    problem.

    "We don't have the manpower to dedicate officers to task forces,"
    Yousefian said.

    "We're getting to the point that we have this huge elephant standing
    in the middle of the room, and we all have closed our eyes. Everybody
    is saying there is no elephant there. We have an issue. We need to
    deal with it."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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