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Man fatally shot by police in Ybor City

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  • Man fatally shot by police in Ybor City

    St. Petersburg Times
    Man fatally shot by police in Ybor City
    By Rodney Thrash, Times Staff Writer
    Sunday, September 7, 2008
    http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/cri me/article799756.ece

    TAMPA - Roobik "Tony" Vartanian once helped law enforcement officials break
    up a drug ring that stretched from Jacksonville to Miami.
    But early Saturday, Tampa police say they couldn't get the 35-year-old man
    to comply with the simplest of pleas: "Drop the weapon!"
    That decision cost Vartanian his life.
    Now his parents, siblings and close friends are left with the task of
    explaining mortality to Vartanian's daughter on the very weekend she
    celebrated her third birthday.
    "We told her 'Daddy's still at work,' " said Aileen Vartanian, his younger
    sister.
    - - -
    Police and witnesses said the chaos started in Club Prana, where Vartanian
    had worked as a bar manager since 2007.
    Vartanian asked two black men from Orlando to stop banging on the walls of
    the E Seventh Avenue nightclub.
    The men threatened Vartanian and said they knew where he lived, club manager
    Aydin Ravaee said.
    Another manager asked the men to leave. Vartanian, Ravaee and the third
    manager escorted the men out a back door.
    At that point, the similarities between police and witness accounts ended.
    - - -
    The men headed toward Vartanian's townhome, directly behind the club on E
    Sixth Avenue, Ravaee said. Vartanian's daughter was inside with a
    babysitter.
    Vartanian followed the men to make sure they didn't harm her.
    "Like any loving father," Ravaee said.
    However, Tampa police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said Vartanian argued with
    the men, shouted a racial epithet at them, threatened to kill them. Ravaee
    said the two men, not Vartanian, made the threats.
    In the midst of the confusion, two plainclothes officers were patrolling
    Ybor City in a unmarked van.
    Windows down, Officer Rick Harrell and his partner heard the commotion, got
    out of the van and saw that Vartanian was armed with a gun.
    "Freeze," Harrell said. "Police!"
    Two times, Harrell demanded Vartanian drop the weapon, police said. After
    the second time, Vartanian turned and pointed the gun at Harrell, a six-year
    police officer.
    At 1:22 a.m., Harrell fired one shot, striking Vartanian in the stomach. He
    died at Tampa General Hospital.
    - - -
    Vartanian did have a gun tucked on his right side, but at no time did he
    point it at anyone, Ravaee said.
    Despite police reports, Ravaee said Harrell never identified himself as an
    officer. "He just plain out murdered him for no reason," he said. "He just
    shot him."
    Family members find it hard to believe that Vartanian uttered a racial slur.
    "He had a girlfriend for seven years that was black," said his father,
    Vasgen Vartanian.
    Harrell was placed on paid administrative leave, which is standard
    procedure.
    - - -
    Vartanian did not have a concealed weapons permit and had previously been
    arrested on six felonies and four misdemeanors, McElroy said.
    Until last year, he lived in Jacksonville, where he worked with law
    enforcement officials as a confidential source in a 2003 drug trafficking
    sting.
    Records from the 11th District Court of Appeals indicate Vartanian bought
    and sold ecstasy in 2002 and 2003, when he was arrested and agreed to assist
    agents as an informant. His work led to the arrest of three others.
    Relatives and friends acknowledge that Vartanian made mistakes. As the
    breadwinner of a family of Armenian immigrants who moved to the United
    States in 1990 without sufficient education or funds, he sometimes felt like
    the wrong choice was the only choice.
    "He was doing that to give his family a better life," said Charles
    Blanchard, who drove from Jacksonville to Tampa as soon as he got the call
    at 2 a.m. Saturday that his best friend of five years was dead.
    "When his family came here, nobody had anything. When you're put in that
    situation, sometimes you just have to do things to feed your family."
    But Blanchard said Vartanian turned away from drug dealing in 2003. He
    taught Latin ballroom dancing. He sold cars. He managed nightclubs. He was a
    popular mixed martial arts fighter who caught the attention of the Florida
    Times-Union, which profiled him last year.
    He was training for his next bout, said Aileen Vartanian, who stood next to
    a makeshift cross marking the spot where her brother fell. Hours after the
    shooting, she saw traces of his blood.
    "Brought me down to my knees," she said. "It was visual, you know, instead
    of just hearing about it."
    Rodney Thrash can be reached at [email protected] or (813) 269-5303.
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