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  • U.S., Armenia Lack Extradition Pact

    U.S., ARMENIA LACK EXTRADITION PACT
    By Alex Dobuzinskis, Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Daily News
    Aug. 14, 2006

    Within days after a teenager was shot and paralyzed at a pickup
    basketball game, suspect Vigen Uguryan hopped on a plane bound
    for Moscow.

    Many airports have flights to the Russian capital, and Glendale
    investigators believe Uguryan, 27, followed an itinerary used by
    other fugitives of Armenian descent - passing through Russia on the
    way to Armenia.

    But Russian authorities detained Uguryan at the airport, fingering
    him for having phony papers. American authorities hoped he would be
    sent back to face trial in the shooting of a teenager at Columbus
    Elementary School in Glendale.

    Then Uguryan was released - because the United States doesn't have
    an extradition treaty with Russia or Armenia.

    "Our State Department asked for his return, and they wouldn't do it,"
    Glendale police Sgt. Ian Grimes said.

    Four years after Uguryan allegedly shot the youth, the former Glendale
    resident is among 50 to 75 fugitives the FBI believes are living in
    Armenia and wanted by Southern California law enforcement agencies
    for arrest or questioning.

    A Russian Embassy official in Washington, D.C., couldn't discuss
    details of the Uguryan case, but cited the lack of a treaty.

    "At this moment we haven't got a treaty over extradition," said
    Alexey Timofeev, press secretary for the Russian Embassy. "That's
    why we have to consider every case as a particular case, a unique
    case through diplomatic and government channels."

    The Armenian Embassy did not return calls seeking comment.

    Local authorities said the job of bringing suspects back from Armenia
    would be easier if America had an extradition treaty with that country,
    as it does with Mexico and more than 100 other nations.

    "It's a lot easier to get away with murder if there is no extradition,"
    said Detective George Shamlyan of the Los Angeles Police Department.

    Last month, Armenian authorities notified Shamlyan that one of the
    LAPD's most wanted - fugitive Vahagan Akopyan, 34 - would be tried
    in Armenia for the 1994 shooting death of Mario Vasquez, 17. Akopyan,
    who lived in Panorama City, allegedly shot Vasquez in Hollywood during
    a gang confrontation.

    U.S. authorities tried to get Akopyan sent back for trial in 2002
    after he walked into the U.S. Embassy in Armenia with a fake passport
    bearing a different name and tried to get a visa.

    Armenian police arrested him on suspicion of using the fake passport,
    but within weeks they released the Armenian native instead of sending
    him back for trial, Shamlyan said. Responding to pressure from the
    FBI, Armenian police arrested Akopyan again this year, and this time
    they plan to try him in Armenia for the Hollywood shooting.

    "I would prefer he get tried here, but I'm glad he's not going to
    walk scot-free after killing a human being here," Shamlyan said.

    "There's going to be some sort of justice for the victim and the
    family."

    In 2003, Armenia abolished the death penalty to honor a commitment
    made when it joined the Council of Europe. That could complicate
    any future efforts to extradite suspects from Armenia, if a treaty
    gets negotiated.

    "Our biggest problem with other countries is the fact that we will
    not forgo the death penalty," University of Southern California law
    professor Edwin Smith said. "Countries will not extradite precisely
    for that reason."

    >From the American side, there are other roadblocks to a treaty,
    not only with Armenia but also with Russia and other former Soviet
    bloc countries.

    "We currently don't have any extradition treaties with countries in
    that region," said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena. "So I don't know if
    Armenia will be the first or Armenia will follow others."

    Before U.S. officials sign an extradition treaty with a country, they
    need assurances Americans would get a fair trial if sent there. The
    U.S. government is helping Armenia strengthen the rule of law, build
    its democracy and bolster an independent judiciary, Schiff said.

    "All of those things I think are improvements that will eventually
    lead to an extradition agreement one day," he said.

    Until then, U.S. authorities and their Armenian counterparts cooperate
    on a case-by-case basis, and Southern California police say Armenian
    authorities have been helpful.

    In cases where the suspect is not an Armenian citizen, authorities
    there will often expel the suspect. In cases where the suspect can
    claim Armenian citizenship, suspects sometimes return voluntarily
    to the United States because they're out of money or wish to avoid
    harsh time in an Armenian prison.

    Through cooperation between U.S. and Armenian authorities, five
    suspects have ended up back in Southern California to face trial for
    violent crimes since 2004, according to the FBI.

    Since local prosecutors aren't obligated to pay to return suspects
    from countries with which the United States doesn't have extradition
    treaties, the FBI has created a program to pay for those airline
    tickets. It's called Project Welcome Home.
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