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Killer of Turkish Diplomat in Los Angeles in 1982 Loses Parole Bid

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  • Killer of Turkish Diplomat in Los Angeles in 1982 Loses Parole Bid

    Los Angeles Times
    Sept 1 2006


    Killer of Turkish Diplomat in Los Angeles in 1982 Loses Parole Bid
    >From the Associated Press
    September 1, 2006


    A man convicted for the 1982 murder of a Turkish diplomat in Westwood
    was denied parole Thursday.

    Harry Sassounian, 43, will not be eligible for parole again until
    2010, said Jane Robison, spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County
    district attorney's office.

    Sassounian's attorney, Mark Geragos, said he didn't view Thursday's
    decision as a setback, arguing that it is rare for parole to be
    granted on the first try.

    "The parole commissioners were very complimentary of his chances next
    time around," Geragos said in a telephone interview.

    Turkish Consul General Kemal Arikan was killed Jan. 28, 1982, while
    stopped at a traffic signal. Sassounian was 19 at the time. A second
    gunman was never caught.

    In 2000, a federal appeals court upheld Sassounian's murder
    conviction but overturned the special-circumstance conviction, which
    alleged that Arikan was killed because of his nationality.

    A jail informant testified that Sassounian told him he killed the
    54-year-old diplomat as revenge for the deaths of about 1.5 million
    Armenians at the hands of Turks late in the 19th century and early in
    the 20th century.

    The reversal threw out Sassounian's sentence of life in prison
    without parole.

    Prosecutors later agreed to drop plans to retry Sassounian on the
    special-circumstance allegation, allowing him a chance at parole in
    exchange for his denouncing of terrorism.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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