Local man sentenced in Armenia
25-year-old gets 10 years for murder
BY EUGENE TONG, Staff Writer
Los Angeles Daily News, CA
Aug. 26, 2006
A Glendale man who fled to Armenia in 2005 when he came under suspicion
of strangling his girlfriend was convicted by an Armenian court of
her murder, authorities said Friday.
Artur Khanzadyan, 25, was convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison
by an Armenian judge in the death of Odet Tsaturyan, of Glendale.
He was arrested in Armenia last November, about two months after
the body of the 23-year-old woman was found in the trunk of his car,
which was abandoned in Azusa.
The verdict was delivered Friday by Judge Mushegh Harutunyan at a
court in Vanadzor, a city about a three-hour drive from the capital
of Yerevan and Khanzadyan's hometown, Glendale police spokesman John
Balian said.
"Based on the police report and the evidence provided, Khanzadyan was
found guilty of murder with the act of jealousy," he said Friday,
citing a report from two Glendale police detectives who assisted
prosecutors and attended the trial.
"We'll be monitoring to make sure he does the full 10 years."
Khanzadyan has about two months to appeal the decision. The Tsaturyans
did not immediately return calls for comment Friday.
Glendale police and U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, had hoped
to try Khanzadyan in the United States, where he could have been
sentenced to 15 years to life in prison for murder, compared to the
maximum 12 years in Armenia.
But the two nations do not have a formal extradition treaty, and the
request was denied despite previous cooperation from authorities.
"Under the circumstances that we were faced with - as far as the
challenge of bringing him back over here - this was the best we could
do to bring him to justice," Balian said.
"There will always be a difference between the two systems. But I
think it's important the criminal element out there know that if we
have to go to Armenia to prosecute you, we will."
Schiff, who sent two letters over the past year to Armenian President
Robert Kocharian requesting Khanzadyan's return, hoped for better
cooperation from authorities next time a fugitive seeks refuge there.
"We are grateful that we apprehended him and that he's not living
free in Armenia," he said in an interview Friday. "But we felt that
justice would've been best served if he had been prosecuted in the
United States."
Judge Harutunyan reached the verdict after two days of hearings that
began Tuesday. Reports prepared by Glendale police and the county
coroner's office were submitted as evidence, and three witnesses -
Odet's father Shagen Tsaturyan and two of Khanzadyan's relatives -
testified, Balian said.
As part of a local custom, Tsaturyan confronted the accused about
his daughter's death.
"At one point, Khanzadyan made disparaging remarks that his daughter
was not the angel he thought she was," Balian said. "The judge
jumped in and said, `Be careful how you speak in my courtroom. Don't
disrespect the victim's father."'
Khanzadyan's attorney Karine Gasparyan said her client did not
intentionally kill Odet Tsaturyan - she had stopped breathing, and
the neck injuries that pointed to strangling came from his attempt
to revive her by CPR.
She also said Khanzadyan suffered a childhood head injury that
prevented rational thinking.
"Khanzadyan apologized to anyone who was affected by the incident,
but he denied he intentionally killed Odet Tsaturyan," Balian said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
25-year-old gets 10 years for murder
BY EUGENE TONG, Staff Writer
Los Angeles Daily News, CA
Aug. 26, 2006
A Glendale man who fled to Armenia in 2005 when he came under suspicion
of strangling his girlfriend was convicted by an Armenian court of
her murder, authorities said Friday.
Artur Khanzadyan, 25, was convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison
by an Armenian judge in the death of Odet Tsaturyan, of Glendale.
He was arrested in Armenia last November, about two months after
the body of the 23-year-old woman was found in the trunk of his car,
which was abandoned in Azusa.
The verdict was delivered Friday by Judge Mushegh Harutunyan at a
court in Vanadzor, a city about a three-hour drive from the capital
of Yerevan and Khanzadyan's hometown, Glendale police spokesman John
Balian said.
"Based on the police report and the evidence provided, Khanzadyan was
found guilty of murder with the act of jealousy," he said Friday,
citing a report from two Glendale police detectives who assisted
prosecutors and attended the trial.
"We'll be monitoring to make sure he does the full 10 years."
Khanzadyan has about two months to appeal the decision. The Tsaturyans
did not immediately return calls for comment Friday.
Glendale police and U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, had hoped
to try Khanzadyan in the United States, where he could have been
sentenced to 15 years to life in prison for murder, compared to the
maximum 12 years in Armenia.
But the two nations do not have a formal extradition treaty, and the
request was denied despite previous cooperation from authorities.
"Under the circumstances that we were faced with - as far as the
challenge of bringing him back over here - this was the best we could
do to bring him to justice," Balian said.
"There will always be a difference between the two systems. But I
think it's important the criminal element out there know that if we
have to go to Armenia to prosecute you, we will."
Schiff, who sent two letters over the past year to Armenian President
Robert Kocharian requesting Khanzadyan's return, hoped for better
cooperation from authorities next time a fugitive seeks refuge there.
"We are grateful that we apprehended him and that he's not living
free in Armenia," he said in an interview Friday. "But we felt that
justice would've been best served if he had been prosecuted in the
United States."
Judge Harutunyan reached the verdict after two days of hearings that
began Tuesday. Reports prepared by Glendale police and the county
coroner's office were submitted as evidence, and three witnesses -
Odet's father Shagen Tsaturyan and two of Khanzadyan's relatives -
testified, Balian said.
As part of a local custom, Tsaturyan confronted the accused about
his daughter's death.
"At one point, Khanzadyan made disparaging remarks that his daughter
was not the angel he thought she was," Balian said. "The judge
jumped in and said, `Be careful how you speak in my courtroom. Don't
disrespect the victim's father."'
Khanzadyan's attorney Karine Gasparyan said her client did not
intentionally kill Odet Tsaturyan - she had stopped breathing, and
the neck injuries that pointed to strangling came from his attempt
to revive her by CPR.
She also said Khanzadyan suffered a childhood head injury that
prevented rational thinking.
"Khanzadyan apologized to anyone who was affected by the incident,
but he denied he intentionally killed Odet Tsaturyan," Balian said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress