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Man Gets 26-Years-To-Life In Road-Rage Slaying

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  • Man Gets 26-Years-To-Life In Road-Rage Slaying

    MAN GETS 26-YEARS-TO-LIFE IN ROAD-RAGE SLAYING

    NBC4.TV, CA
    Sept 27 2006

    34-Year-Old Was Extradicted To US From Armenia For Trial

    VAN NUYS, Calif. -- The first man to be handed over to U.S. authorities
    by Armenia to face criminal charges was sentenced Wednesday to
    26 years to life in state prison for the road-rage murder of a
    documentary filmmaker.

    Van Nuys Superior Court Judge Kathryne Stoltz rejected the defense's
    request for a new trial for Shahen Eghia Keshishian and refused to
    reduce his first-degree murder conviction to second-degree murder.

    Keshishian, 34, was also found guilty Aug. 25 of vehicular manslaughter
    with gross negligence and leaving the scene of an accident.

    Jurors also found true the allegation that Keshishian used his GMC
    Suburban as a dangerous and deadly weapon when he ran down Michael
    Craven on April 29, 2000, as he stood on the shoulder of the Hollywood
    (101) Freeway, south of Barham Boulevard.

    The 44-year-old Canoga Park resident had been driving southbound when
    someone in the SUV that Keshishian was driving began lobbing eggs at
    his Jeep, authorities said.

    Both motorists pulled over and Keshishian ran down Craven as he stood
    on the shoulder, then sped away.

    The filmmaker died at a hospital.

    Keshishian was charged with Craven's slaying on June 23, 2000, and
    charged separately by federal authorities that November with unlawful
    flight to avoid prosecution.

    He was placed on the Los Angeles Police Department's most wanted list
    and named as a fugitive on the FBI's Web site.

    In October 2004, with the help of various agencies in the United
    States and in Yerevan, the LAPD's homicide unit located Keshishian
    in Armenia, where he had ties, according to Glendale police.

    He was arrested a month later by the Armenian government for
    overstaying his visa and subsequently extradited to the United States.

    Glendale police said then that it was the first time someone located
    in Armenia was handed to U.S. authorities to be returned to face
    criminal charges.
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