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Confusion Surrounds Investigation Of Armenian Youth's Murder In Mosc

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  • Confusion Surrounds Investigation Of Armenian Youth's Murder In Mosc

    CONFUSION SURROUNDS INVESTIGATION OF ARMENIAN YOUTH'S MURDER IN MOSCOW

    Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union, DC
    May 4 2006

    The prime suspect in the murder of an Armenian youth in Moscow last
    month has been released after signing a written pledge not to leave the
    city until the investigation is completed, according to an April 28,
    2006 report by the Newsru.com news web site. Prosecutors were not able
    to muster enough evidence to charge 16 year old Denis Kulagin and had
    to release him after 72 hours of detention. Mr. Kulagin originally
    confessed to the murder of Vigen Abramyants, but later retracted
    his confession.

    Meanwhile, public mistrust of police-who are regularly accused of
    torturing suspects into making false confessions and covering up
    anti-minority violence-appears to be damaging the case. In an April
    28, 2006 interview with the national daily Moskovsky Komsomolets,
    the victim's father claimed that 11 witnesses saw his son killed by
    skinheads, a version of events that investigators have characterized
    as a red herring designed to distract attention from Mr. Kulagin,
    who they believed killed Mr. Abramyants after a quarrel over a girl.

    Rafael Abramyants alleged that police pressured Mr. Kulagin into
    confessing, telling him that as a youth, he would get a suspended
    sentence. Another witness, identified only by her first name Elmira,
    was quoted in the newspaper report saying that Vigen Abramyants was
    killed by skinheads; his father then added that a metro security
    camera was missing four hours of film which should have recorded the
    murder. Police earlier refuted this charge, asserting that the camera
    did record the murder, but that the victim was obscured from view by
    a large group of passengers.
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