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Crime rings targeted: Armenian, U.S. authorities working together

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  • Crime rings targeted: Armenian, U.S. authorities working together

    Armenian, U.S. authorities working together
    By Alex Dobuzinskis , Staff Writer

    Pasadena Star-News
    Los Angeles Daily News
    Feb 17 2005

    Crime rings targeted

    GLENDALE -- Armenian officials are working with local law enforcement
    agencies to fight organized crime rings that victimize residents in
    the Southland and Armenia, officials said Wednesday.

    The cooperative effort was discussed at the Glendale Police Department,
    where John Evans, the U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, met with local
    police officials.

    "It's the flip side really of globalization. So much of what happens
    in the world today knows no international boundaries, and the same
    can be said of crime today,' Evans said.

    Of particular concern are the crimes of money laundering, smuggling
    and immigration fraud, officials said.

    "There's been significant amounts of money that have flown back
    and forth that we're concerned with,' said Glendale police Chief
    Randy Adams.

    As many as 500 criminals are believed to be associated with Armenian
    organized crime gangs in the Los Angeles area, said Sgt. Steve Davey of
    the Glendale Police Department's Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force.

    Adams said his department has sent detectives to Armenia to teach in
    police academies there.

    The contacts developed with Armenian police have led to the
    apprehension of suspects, he said.

    Within the past year, three fugitives have been brought back to
    Los Angeles from Armenia to face murder or attempted murder charges
    stemming from incidents in the east San Fernando Valley, officials
    said.

    One of the suspects, a former truck driver from Burbank, was listed
    as one of the FBI's most wanted. Shahen Keshishian was arrested by
    Armenian authorities in November and handed over to U.S. officials.
    He is charged with murdering a Canoga Park man during a road- rage
    incident in Universal City in 2000.

    Armenia does not have an extradition treaty with the United States,
    but that has not prevented authorities there from helping local law
    enforcement agencies.

    "When there is a will to be cooperative more things are possible then
    when there is the opposite,' Evans said, adding that officials hope
    to negotiate an extradition treaty with Armenia, which does not have
    the death penalty.
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