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Montreal: Judge scorches CIBC branch manager

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  • Montreal: Judge scorches CIBC branch manager

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    May 27, 2005 Friday
    Final Edition

    Judge scorches CIBC branch manager: Denounces failure to contact
    fraud victims. Trial for Montreal couple who unknowingly guaranteed
    losses of strangers nears verdict

    PAUL DELEAN, The Gazette


    The lawyer defending CIBC Wood Gundy's seizure of $1.4 million from a
    retired Montreal couple who unknowingly guaranteed the trading losses
    of complete strangers got a thorough grilling yesterday from Superior
    Court Judge Jean-Pierre Senecal.

    As CIBC lawyer Bernard Amyot presented closing arguments in the
    five-month-old trial, Senecal intervened for clarification on several
    key points.

    He drew attention to the failure of CIBC branch manager Tom Noonan to
    actually phone or meet with retirees Haroutioun and Alice Markarian
    in the years before the brokerage took their money using guarantees
    obtained by former broker Harry Migirdic, an admitted fraudster. (The
    Markarians are suing the CIBC for the return of the $1.4 million,
    plus $10 million in punitive damages).

    "Why didn't he (Noonan) make a call?," the judge asked.

    Amyot said he sent letters instead.

    "Is there any better way to facilitate fraud than do everything on
    paper?" Judge Senecal commented, later adding "if it had only
    Noonans, CIBC would be bankrupt."

    He also wondered why CIBC had never contacted Sebuh Gazarosyan, whose
    account (guaranteed by the Markarians) was $1 million in the hole.
    Gazarosyan was Migirdic's uncle in Turkey and only a figurehead.

    "If I'm a branch manager, and a client I don't know owes $1 million,
    I think I'd be interested in meeting him," Senecal observed. "He owes
    $1 million to CIBC, but the branch manager never meets him. How is
    that possible?"

    Amyot agreed that if calls had been made, the fraud would have been
    detected sooner, but maintained the Markarians had deactivated CIBC's
    internal checks and balances by signing guarantee confirmations year
    after year.

    Senecal also zeroed in on wording in the CIBC defence mentioning that
    Migirdic and Markarian both were members of Montreal's tight-knit
    Armenian community and giving the impression they were somehow
    complicit.

    "Why this reference to them being in the same community? Why insist
    on that?" the judge asked.

    Amyot said CIBC never alleged there was an Armenian plot, but there
    could have been. "Was it a possibility? Yes. There's nothing racist
    in saying that."

    The trial is expected to conclude today.
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