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Governor Signs Bill Extending Time For Armenian Genocide Suits

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  • Governor Signs Bill Extending Time For Armenian Genocide Suits

    GOVERNOR SIGNS BILL EXTENDING TIME FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SUITS
    By Kenneth Ofgang, Staff Writer

    Metropolitan News-Enterprise, CA
    Sept 27 2006

    Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has signed legislation giving victims
    of genocide in Armenia and their heirs and beneficiaries another 10
    years to sue for the loss or theft of assets deposited in European
    or Asian banks.

    SB 1524, which the governor signed on Monday, extends the limitations
    period for such claims to Dec. 31, 2016. The bill is similar to prior
    legislation allowing additional time for victims to sue for unpaid
    insurance proceeds or restitution of misappropriated artworks.

    A group of plaintiffs earlier this year sued Germany's Deutsche Bank
    and Dresdner Bank. The putative class action complaint filed in
    the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California in
    Deirmenjian v. Deutsche Bank, A.G., CV 06-00774, alleged the banks
    wrongfully held Armenian assets and froze Armenian bank accounts
    during the period of the Armenian Genocide.

    The plaintiffs are represented by three attorneys of Armenian descent,
    Brian Kabateck, partner with Kabateck Brown Kellner; Mark Geragos,
    partner with Geragos & Geragos; and Vartkes Yeghiayan of Yeghiayan
    and Associates.

    "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," Kabateck explained
    in a release. "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."

    The class action plaintiffs estimate that the banks took more than
    $22.5 million in looted assets, based on 1915 dollars.

    Schwarzenegger also signed AB 424, permanently designating April 24
    as the Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide.

    He explained in a statement:

    "Between 1915 and 1923, a systematic and deliberate campaign of
    genocide by the Ottoman Turkish government resulted in the deaths
    of over 1.5 million Armenians and the exile of a people from their
    historic homeland. During this period, tens of thousands of displaced
    Armenians took refuge in the United States, many in California. These
    survivors embraced this country and this state. Among them and their
    descendents emerged leaders in business, agriculture, sports, academics
    and the arts. Today, a few survivors remain as a living testament to
    the horror that took place 90 years ago. We must recognize crimes
    against humanity if we are to prevent them; silence in the face of
    genocide effectively encourages those who would commit such atrocities
    in the future."

    The Turkish government has called the 1.5 million figure "grossly
    erroneous" and has attributed the deaths of Armenians in that period to
    "intercommunal" political, rather than ethnic and religious, conflict.

    Schwarzenegger earlier signed a bill directing the state's public
    employee retirement funds to divest from companies that do business
    in Sudan, where the government persists in denying reports that
    an estimated 200,000 black Africans in the Darfur region have been
    killed and many times that number displaced as a result of attacks
    by Arab militias.
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