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New York Life Agrees To Pay Armenians $8 Million

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  • New York Life Agrees To Pay Armenians $8 Million

    NEW YORK LIFE AGREES TO PAY ARMENIANS $8 MILLION
    By R.J. Lehmann, Washington bureau manager

    BestWire
    November 14, 2006

    NEW YORK (BestWire) - Nearly $8 million in settlement checks are
    going out this month to more than 2,500 descendents of victims of the
    Armenian Genocide, part of a multinational class-action settlement
    with New York Life Insurance Co. over unpaid life insurance benefits
    owed to the families of genocide victims.

    Approved in February 2004 as a $20 million global settlement, the
    agreement called for the life insurer to pay inflation-adjusted
    benefits, administrative costs, and plaintiffs' attorneys fees for
    more than 2,000 pre-1915 life insurance policies that were held by
    Ottoman Armenians and that company records still listed as outstanding.

    The disbursements come after settlement board reviews of thousands of
    claims verified 2,515 that could be traced legitimately to policies
    sold by New York Life. U.S. descendents will collect $2.6 million of
    the settlement proceeds, while descendents living in Armenia will
    receive $3.4 million. The remaining $2 million will be distributed
    among descendents living in 24 other countries.

    "We are thrilled that thousands of Armenians will finally get the
    insurance compensation they deserve," said Brian Kabateck, one of the
    lead attorneys for the plaintiffs, in a statement. "Armenians don't
    give up easily and this settlement is a testament to that."

    In January 2005, a fund representing "unclaimed or heirless"
    policies previously distributed $3 million in benefits to Armenian
    civic organizations. Groups that collected from the fund included
    the Armenian Church of North America's western and eastern dioceses;
    the Armenian Apostolic Church's western and eastern prelacies; the
    Armenian Apostolic Catholic Exarchate; Armenian Missionary Association
    of America; the Armenian General Benevolent Union; Armenian Educational
    Foundation, and the Armenian Relief Society.

    (BestWire, Jan. 26, 2005)

    The Armenian Genocide, also known as the Armenian Holocaust, refers
    to events that took place during World War I in the Ottoman Empire,
    which has evolved into modern Turkey but which, at the time, controlled
    most of the Middle East. Most historians, including the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars, agree that from 1915 to 1920, Ottoman
    Turks killed more than 1.5 million men, women and children of Armenian
    heritage and drove millions more from their homes during the conflict.

    However, the Turkish government disputes the historical accounts,
    and some countries -- including the United States, United Kingdom,
    and Israel -- do not formally recognize the period as a "genocide."

    However, the period is acknowledged as a genocide by the governments
    of Canada, Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Russia,
    and Greece, as well as 39 of the 50 U.S. states.

    Founded in 1845, New York Life began selling policies in Europe in
    the 1870s, and had sold about 8,000 policies in the Ottoman Empire
    by 1915, when the company pulled out of Europe as World War I began
    to rage. However, the company's review of its records showed only
    about half of the Ottoman policies were purchased by Armenians. The
    company believes about one-third of its Armenian claims were paid in
    the war's aftermath, when the company hired an Armenian attorney in
    Constantinople to adjust claims and search for heirs.
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