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Richard Elbrecht Led Unit At State Consumers Agency

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  • Richard Elbrecht Led Unit At State Consumers Agency

    RICHARD ELBRECHT LED UNIT AT STATE CONSUMERS AGENCY
    by Robert D. Davila [email protected]

    Sacramento Bee
    June 1, 2008 Sunday
    California

    He was a lawyer who photographed historic Armenian churches in Turkey.

    Richard A. Elbrecht expressed his concern for others with a firm
    grasp of the law, a passion for preserving cultural treasures and
    tireless dedication.

    He championed the rights of consumers and small businesses as a lawyer,
    including 27 years heading the legal services unit at the California
    Department of Consumer Affairs. Although officially retired in 2003,
    he continued working as a state annuitant to update a handbook for
    small-claims court judges and consumer advocates.

    He spent two decades with his wife photographing historic Armenian
    churches and cathedrals in eastern Turkey. During nine trips, they
    captured images of the rich heritage of a nation nearly destroyed by
    20th-century genocide. In December, the couple agreed to donate the
    collection of 157 prints to the Armenian Studies Program at California
    State University, Fresno.

    Mr. Elbrecht was in Fresno to meet with CSU officials about creating
    a Web page for the project when he died Monday of heart arrhythmia
    at his hotel, said his wife, Anne. He was 74.

    "This collection is an invaluable gift," said Armenian studies lecturer
    Barlow Der Mugrdechian at CSU, Fresno. "It will make the program the
    foremost archive of these historic churches anywhere in the world
    and accessible to everyone on the Internet."

    Mr. Elbrecht devoted his life to helping others. He spent six years
    as a lawyer at the Legal Aid Society in San Jose and became deputy
    director of the National Consumer Law Center in Boston in 1970. He
    wrote manuals on federal consumer law and helped draft the Wisconsin
    Consumer Act.

    He returned after two years to private practice in California and
    was recruited in 1976 to create and lead the legal services unit of
    the state Consumer Affairs Department. He drafted bills, testified
    at administrative hearings, worked on litigation and promoted public
    education of consumer protections. He put in long hours, often editing
    legal memos at home past midnight.

    "He was always upbeat and praising people for their work," staff
    attorney Albert Balingit said. "He mentored and gave us so much
    confidence. He had a big heart for helping the little guy."

    Richard Allen Elbrecht was born in 1933 to a probate lawyer and a
    homemaker in Cleveland. He grew up with a younger sister in Lyndhurst,
    Ohio, where their father was mayor for 25 years.

    He was a sports photographer for the campus newspaper at Yale
    University, where he earned a bachelor's degree in economics in
    1955. He served two years in the Navy, earned a law degree from the
    University of Michigan in 1960 and moved to San Jose. He spent six
    years in private practice before joining the Legal Aid Society.

    A 22-year marriage ended in divorce. He married Anne Elbrecht in 1983.

    During a vacation trip to Turkey in 1987, Mr. Elbrecht and his wife
    learned many Armenian churches had been abandoned since the 1915
    genocide. The couple began a mission to document the ancient religious
    monuments, traveling back roads without guides to photograph churches
    built as early as the 7th century.

    The images were widely exhibited at Armenian churches in California
    and during international conferences of scholars on historic Armenia
    at UCLA.

    "Richard was an extroverted, super-high-energy person," Anne Elbrecht
    said. "He wanted to start back into photography, and this was a
    project we decided to do. It was a way to help others."

    Richard A. Elbrecht Born: Aug. 10, 1933 Died: May 26, 2008 Remembered
    for: Created and served 27 years as head of the legal services unit
    at the state Department of Consumer Affairs; photographed historic
    Armenian churches in Turkey and donated collection to California State
    University, Fresno Survived by: Wife, Anne, of Davis; sons, Brian, of
    Sacramento, and Steven, of Long Beach; and sister, Marilyn Zimmann,
    of Salem, Ohio Services: 11 a.m. Thursday at St. Francis of Assisi
    Church, 1066 26th St., Sacramento; luncheon to follow Remembrances:
    In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Armenian Studies
    Program at California State University, Fresno, 5245 N. Backer Ave.,
    M/S PB4, Fresno, CA 93740-8001.
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