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LA: Citizenship Of Armenians Upheld

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  • LA: Citizenship Of Armenians Upheld

    CITIZENSHIP OF ARMENIANS UPHELD
    By Gillian Flaccus, Associated Press

    Los Angeles Daily News
    Sept 7 2005

    A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that a judge did not err in
    granting U.S. citizenship to two Armenian men convicted more than 20
    years ago of planning to bomb the Turkish Consulate in Philadelphia.
    The decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ends a long
    struggle by Viken Hovsepian and Viken Yacoubian, who plotted to bomb
    the consulate in retaliation for the killings of Armenians by Turks
    in 1915. The Turkish government denies a massacre occurred.

    The men, who have been out of prison since the early 1990s, now have
    doctorates, have renounced violence and volunteer many hours a week
    in the Los Angeles Armenian- American community, said Mathew Millen,
    an attorney who helped handle the immigration portion of their case.

    Federal law currently forbids convicted terrorists from becoming
    citizens. But anyone convicted of an aggravated felony before November
    1990 can be granted citizenship if they have been "of good moral
    character" for five years prior to their application, Millen said.

    "They both renounced violence as a means of achieving any kind of
    political end," Millen said by phone. "They both have Ph.D.s, and
    they had a lot of witnesses who talked about their activity in the
    community" at their immigration hearing.

    The federal government fought the citizenship application, contending
    that the men lied on certain portions of their applications. The 9th
    Circuit affirmed Tuesday a lower-court opinion that the alleged "lies"
    were actually misunderstandings or oversights.

    "We accept the court's ruling, as we do with any ruling," said Thom
    Mrozek, spokesman for the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles.

    The men were in their early 20s when they and two others were
    arrested in 1982 after authorities tape-recorded them planning the
    bombing. Authorities at the time said they were linked to the Justice
    Commandos of the Armenian Genocide.

    Hovsepian was sentenced to six years in prison in 1984, while Yacoubian
    was sentenced to three years in prison and 1,000 hours of community
    service.

    Yacoubian is now principal of the Rose and Alex Pilibos Armenian
    School in Los Angeles' Little Armenia and has obtained a doctorate
    in counseling psychology from the University of Southern California,
    according to court documents.

    He declined to comment when reached by phone at the school. His
    attorney, Michael Lightfoot, did not immediately return calls Tuesday.
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