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Armenian attorneys applaud Gov. Schwarzenegger's signing of SB 1524

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  • Armenian attorneys applaud Gov. Schwarzenegger's signing of SB 1524

    CONTACTS:
    Brian Kabateck
    Mark Geragos
    Kabateck Brown Kellner LLP
    Geragos & Geragos
    213-217-5000 213 625-3900
    [email protected]
    [email protected]

    Dian e Zakian Rumbaugh Vartkes Yeghiayan
    Rumbaugh Public Relations Yeghiayan & Associates
    805-493-2877
    818-242-7400

    rumbaugh@ear thlink.net
    [email protected]

    PRESS RELEASE September 26, 2006

    ATTORNEYS REPRESENTING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE VICTIMS
    APPLAUD GOV. SCHWARZENEGGER'S SIGNING OF SB 1524

    LOS ANGELES, CALIF.--Attorneys representing the heirs of
    Armenian Genocide victims whose family assets were inappropriately held
    for decades by German banks are welcoming yesterday's signing by
    Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of California Senate Bill 1524. The law
    enables families to seek legal action to recover assets lost or stolen
    as a result of the American Genocide.

    The attorneys, all of Armenian decent, are Brian Kabateck,
    partner with Kabateck Brown Kellner, Mark Geragos, partner with Geragos
    & Geragos and Vartkes Yeghiayan of Yeghiayan and Associates. The
    attorneys filed a lawsuit earlier this year against Deutsche Bank and
    Dresdner Bank, two German banks they say wrongfully held Armenian assets
    and froze Armenian bank accounts during the Armenian Genocide that began
    in 1915. (Varoujan Deirmenjian, et. al. v. Deutsche Bank, A.G., Dresdner
    Bank, A.G., et. al., Case No. CV 06-00774, U.S. District Court, Central
    District of California).

    Under the new law, Armenian Genocide victims, heirs or beneficiaries who
    live in California can bring or continue a court action against a
    financial institution for its failure to pay or turn over deposited or
    looted assets. The statute of limitation for filing a claim is December
    31, 2016.

    "Deutsche Bank and Dresdner Bank were approached by Turkish
    leaders to store Armenian artwork, gold and other valuables that were
    illegally seized by the Turks during the Armenian Genocide," says
    Kabateck. "The assets and the money deposited by Armenians in these
    banks mysteriously disappeared and were considered lost for decades.
    With most of the rightful owners massacred, these banks apparently
    thought they could get away with stealing family assets from an entire
    generation of Armenians. A new generation of Armenians has set out to
    right this wrong."

    "We applaud Gov. Schwarzenegger's efforts to recognize the
    atrocities of the Armenian Genocide and to hold accountable those who
    benefited from the terrible acts that occurred so long ago," says
    Geragos.

    The class action suit estimates that the banks took more
    than $22.5 million in looted assets, based on 1915 dollars. "We assume
    banks have a fiduciary duty to ensure its customers' deposited assets
    and securities are protected," says Yeghiayan. "This duty was ignored
    for 90 years by the German banks. This new law will shine a light on a
    shameful act of wrongdoing and greed."

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