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Glendale: Outside mailer generates woes for Quintero

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  • Glendale: Outside mailer generates woes for Quintero

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    June 9 2006

    Outside mailer generates woes for Quintero
    BY ALEX DOBUZINSKIS, Staff Writer



    GLENDALE - Although his failed run for state Assembly is behind him,
    City Councilman Frank Quintero still faces questions about the
    campaign because of a last-minute mailer some denounced as racist.
    The mailer was distributed by the California Latino Leadership Fund,
    and sought to link Paul Krekorian, an Armenian-American who was
    Quintero's opponent in the Democratic primary, to terrorism.

    Quintero has worked for years to cultivate ties with Glendale's huge
    Armenian community and maintains he had nothing to do with the
    campaign hit piece.

    "I condemn the independent mailer and its message," Quintero said.
    "Now I'm looking forward to continuing to serve the people of
    Glendale and enjoying my time on the council."

    But City Councilman Ara Najarian, another Armenian-American, wants
    the council to hold a hearing into the mailer and a related phone
    message campaign.

    "It went way past Paul Krekorian," Najarian said. "It went to all the
    Armenians, so essentially I feel that all Armenians were under attack
    when that mailer was sent out."

    The mailer sent by the Oakland-based Leadership Fund targeted
    Krekorian and the Armenian National Committee of America, an advocacy
    group that endorsed him.

    The mailer accused the ANC of giving an award to "suspected
    terrorist" Mourad Topalian in 2000, and faulted Krekorian for
    accepting the ANC's endorsement in the Assembly race.

    Topalian, a former Armenian National Committee leader, was sentenced
    in 2001 to 37 months in prison for storing stolen explosives and
    owning two machine guns. The ANC says it cut its ties with Topalian
    after his conviction.

    In fact, Quintero himself had been endorsed by the ANC when he ran
    for City Council in 2001.

    "I'm fine with the Armenian community," Quintero said. "I don't have
    any issues with the Armenian community.

    "The California (Latino) Leadership Fund needs to issue a letter and
    a statement telling people that I have not in any way been involved
    in that mailer."

    Krekorian, 46, a Burbank school board member, said he was hurt by the
    mailer, which implicated his wife because she is an ANC member.

    "It's beyond anything that really should be acceptable," he said, "by
    anyone in the political arena."

    Officials with the Latino Leadership Fund did not return phone calls.


    Although the group was prohibited by law from contacting Quintero's
    campaign before the primary, City Councilmen Rafi Manoukian and Bob
    Yousefian - both Armenian-Americans - said they believe Quintero was
    involved in sending out the mailer.

    "I don't know what's going to happen but there is a lot of anger in
    the community," said Manoukian, who supported Krekorian for the 43rd
    Assembly District seat.

    Krekorian defeated Quintero 57-43 percent in Tuesday's primary and
    will face Republican Michael Agbaba and Libertarian Steve Myers in
    November.

    The Latino Leadership Fund received money from PG&E Corp., Sempra
    Energy and others, although most of its money came from the San
    Manuel Band of Mission Indians. The Indian band also gave $3,200 to
    Quintero's campaign.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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