Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Assailants Unknown: Investigation Surrounding Assault On Reporter Dr

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Assailants Unknown: Investigation Surrounding Assault On Reporter Dr

    ASSAILANTS UNKNOWN: INVESTIGATION SURROUNDING ASSAULT ON REPORTER DROPPED
    Kristine Aghalaryan

    Feature Stories society criminal
    hetq.am/en/society/lusine-barseghyan/
    2009/04/20 | 19:12

    On August 11, 2008, a criminal case was initiated surrounding the
    assault on Lusineh Barseghyan, a reporter for the daily newspaper
    "Haykakan Zhamanak". The case was halted exactly three months later,
    on November 11. The reporter's assailants were never found despite
    the fact that the investigating body claimed that no stone was left
    unturned to uncover the truth.

    "No gaffes were made in the case. Work was carried out according to
    procedure. You can criticize the police all you want. All angles were
    covered because the case was supervised by top officials," stated
    Artashes Hovhannisyan, an investigator with the Police Department's
    Nor Nork Investigative Unit, during a conversation with "Hetq".

    Our investigation of the matter gives us grounds to argue that the
    investigative body didn't satisfactorily carry out its probe of
    the crime.

    On August 11, 2008, at around 9:40 in the morning, "Haykakan Zhamanak"
    reporter Lusineh Barseghyan was assaulted by two unknown assailants.

    "When I had left the house to go to work I noticed that a car parked by
    a nearby house started its engine and started to follow me. I thought
    that they might be employees of the National Security Service, since
    at the time they were looking for Nikol (Nikol Pashinyan, editor of
    the paper on the run and being sought by law enforcement for March
    1st events - KA). All of us at the paper were being followed. I
    didn't pay the car any attention but was puzzled that this time
    their movements were quite apparent. I had reached the steps and was
    descending when I noticed that the car pulled up close by. They got
    out of the car and proceeded to hit me. I yelled out and my screams
    attracted passersby. When my attackers saw a crowd forming, they fled
    the scene," recounts Lusineh.

    Hearing Lusineh's screams, a worker at a nearby gas station and some
    passersby ran to help the reporter, but by the time they reached
    the scene her attackers had managed to flee. Lusineh believes her
    assailants picked the staircase because it is usually desolate and
    presents an easy getaway.

    Lusineh also believes that there were two cars, not one. One of them
    was parked at the top of the stairs and the other at the bottom, making
    a getaway much easier. The entire incident happened so quickly that
    Lusineh couldn't make out where the assailants fled to upon hearing
    the noise made by the individuals who were running to her aid. She
    didn't even get a chance to see the faces of those hitting her. All
    she remembers is that they appeared to be in good physical shape and
    resembled skin-heads.

    "I was in shock. I hailed the first passing taxi with the intention
    of following the fleeing attackers. But they literally disappeared
    in a flash. This is why I believe that there was another car at the
    bottom of the stairs," Lusineh states.

    On the street, while waiting at a red traffic light, Lusineh spotted a
    white "Moskvich" with a license plate bearing the number 15LU393. In
    the car she eyed the driver, wearing a police uniform, and in the
    back a man with a shaven head that resembled her attacker and another
    person. She remembers that these individuals seemed to be intently
    watching her.

    Injured, Lusineh managed to get to the paper's office. They called an
    ambulance and she was taken to the Saint Grigor Lusavoritch Medical
    Center. The doctors examined her and diagnosed a hairline fracture
    to the head and hematoma.

    Investigators were able to find out that the Moskvich 21-41 vehicle
    with license plate #15 LU 393 belonged to Vahe Khachatryan, who resided
    at Apartment 111, Building 17, Nansen Street, Nor Nork First District,
    Yerevan. The car was being driven by his father Armen Khachatryan,
    a senior police officer at a Protection Directorate attached to the
    Central Division.

    The investigation revealed that on the evening of August 10, a day
    before the incident, Armen Khachatryan assumed his shift at the
    Triumph Coffee House on Isahakyan Street. He ended his shift the
    next morning at around 9:30. He then took Seyran Sargsyan, a worker
    at the coffee house, and Yuri Sargsyan, an electrical repairman, to
    Saryan Street in Yerevan. After dropping them off, Armen Khachatryan
    drove to the village of Akner in Lori Marz on personal business. No
    evidence implicating these three individuals in the assault case was
    ever uncovered.

    Since Lusineh was registered as a resident at the family home in
    Avan, the criminal case was assumed by the Nor Nork police precinct
    in accordance with Article 118 of the RoA Criminal Code (Beating or
    other forms of physical assault punishable by a minimum fine of one
    hundred times wages or a maximum imprisonment of two months)

    On August 12, the Nor Nork Investigative Unit officially launched
    their case. Investigator Artashes Hovhannisyan claims that the police
    were give special directives to set up an operational squad to uncover
    the identity of Lusineh's two attackers, but that all their efforts
    were fruitless.

    A court forensics examination was appointed in the case. After being
    recognized as the aggrieved party, Lusineh was initially interviewed
    but never appeared to complete the forensic examination due to her
    busy schedule even though she was repeatedly requested to appear at
    the investigative unit.

    The investigator presented numerous notices to prove that Lusineh
    was informed, both by telephone and in writing, to appear before the
    court physician in order to arrive at a final assessment regarding
    the severity of the injuries she had sustained.

    "For a month they tried to convince me to go see the forensics doctor
    again. I explained to them that I didn't have the time and because
    up till then they were only examining me, I didn't see any sense in
    going back to the doctor again. As far as I could understand, they
    wanted me to go back to forensics and if there were no results it
    would be much easier for them to close the case," Lusineh explains.

    Even though Lusineh didn't appear for a forensic examination the second
    time, on November 11, the court physician issued a conclusion based
    on his initial examination - "The bodily injuries sustained by Lusineh
    Barseghyan caused minor harm to her health of a temporary nature".

    Investigator Artashes Hovhannisyan states, "The case proceedings
    were halted despite the fact that operational intelligence activities
    continue till today."

    Naturally, they never found out who my assailants were, even though I
    provided them with details that would have made it easy to find them,"
    Lusineh says.

    Lusineh says that the same car parked outside the entrance to her house
    at the time of the incident was seen surveilling the paper's offices
    for a few days. The car was a deep purple "Zhiguli 06" make. People
    visiting the offices even spotted the car parked outside.

    A few days before the assault an individual named Garen visited the
    "Haykakan Zhamanak" office and introduced himself as being from the
    "Sargis Tkhrouni" youth wing. He said he wanted to see Lusineh. Busy
    at the time, Lusineh asked that the man wait a few minutes. When she
    went outside Garen had already left.

    The same person also visited the home of Lusineh's parents. Norayr
    Barseghyan, Lusineh's father, recounted that the young man
    asked about Lusineh, stating that he wanted to work for "Haykakan
    Zhamanak". He was a man of about thirty-five with a round face and
    light hair. Mr. Barseghyan says, "I told the man to go to the paper's
    office if he wanted to work there and I asked him why he had come to
    my house." The man replied that he had already gone to the newspaper
    and that they had sent him to the home of Lusineh's parents.

    Lusineh later found out that no such person as Garen existed in the
    "Sargis Tkhrouni" organization. She confidently states that, "They
    did their homework."

    No composite sketch of Lusineh's assailants was ever made since the
    reporter only saw them from behind and the passersby who came to her
    rescue were unknown.

    The investigator complains that Lusineh was pretty aloof when it came
    to taking measures to crack the case; she never showed up at the
    investigative office and didn't assist in the examination. Lusineh
    argues that the police never intended to identify the culprits and
    that the whole investigative was merely a sham.

    "The same young man telephoned the newspaper office. I told the police
    the approximate time of the call. I they wanted to find out who he was
    they could have gone to the ArmenTel records. I could have described
    him as well," states the reporter.

    According to the investigator, there was no need to come up with a
    composite sketch of the man calling himself Karen. "Karen wasn't one
    of the perpetrators. Lusineh ties him to the assault but Karen came
    on the scene a week before it happened. She doesn't know for sure,
    she's merely making a supposition. She should have come to us to
    examine any possible connection," says the investigator who adds that
    they explored all possible theories. What remains puzzling however
    is why the investigator is so convinced that this Karen character
    had no connection to the case.

    Even though many of them got a good look at Karen, Lusineh, "Haykakan
    Zhamanak" employees and Lusineh's parents, the investigator claims
    that Lusineh's recollection of Karen was spotty and that's why no
    artist's rendition was made. "We also interviewed the father and
    he wasn't able to give us a good description," states Investigator
    Khachatryan. Lusineh contradicts the claim and says that they never
    even interviewed members of the newspaper staff who saw the guy.

    Artashes Khachatryan says that they couldn't come up with anything
    from the telephone records as well. "We tried to uncover his identity
    through the phone records but couldn't. We called up Lusineh to verify
    some of the numbers but she refused to assist us." We need to remind
    readers that Lusineh informed the police as to the approximate time
    that Karen called her at the office. It wouldn't have been difficult
    for the investigators to check the calls, even in her absence.

    Lusineh says this young man wasn't one of her attackers. Her assailants
    were guys with cleanly shaved heads while the man calling himself Karen
    had light colored hair. "With all these details any professional worth
    his weight in salt could have easily found these guys, but nothing
    of the sort happened. The case dragged on for some months and then
    they declared it closed," says Lusineh and adds, "They never kept me
    abreast of the case. I only heard by accident that the case had been
    closed on the basis that there was no second witness and that evidence
    was insufficient. It was evident from the get-go that the case would
    never be solved because it was linked to my work as a reporter."

    Prior to the incident the reporter had written a series of
    articles regarding the misuse of office by certain government
    officials. Particularly noted in the articles were National Assembly
    Deputy Samvel Alexanyan, Erebuni district leader Mher Sedrakyan,
    and the activities of Hovik Abrahamyan, who at the time headed the
    staff of Serzh Sargsyan.

    The reporter unabashedly states that, "I even told them that
    the number one suspect in my book was Erebuni district leader
    Mher Sedrakyan and that others might be involved as well; Hovik
    Abrahamyan for example. Furthermore, since they were tapping our
    phone conversations they knew that an article on police abuse was in
    the works." (http://www.hzh.am/Arkhiv/2008/August/1308/13-08.h tml,
    http://www.hzh.am/Arkhiv/2008/August/0108/01- 08.html)

    According to Investigator Khachatryan there were many possible theories
    as to the assault and all were approached from the viewpoint of the
    reporter's professional activities. "She also gave us the name of
    National Assembly President Hovik Abrahamyan. Should we have paid him
    a visit and interrogated him," asks the investigator who verifies that
    they didn't question him. "She said that the assailants could have been
    his guys. Our operative unit followed up on the lead. If there was any
    connection we would have come up with it." Investigator Khachatryan
    is quick to claim that all possible investigative procedures were
    carried out and stresses that, "by the way, the case was being
    directly supervised by the minister and even reached the personal
    staff of the president."

    "Hetq" sent a written request to the RoA Prosecutor General to find out
    why a composite police sketch of the man called Karen was never made,
    why the phone records weren't checked, and why "Haykakan Zhamanak"
    staff weren't questioned. In response to our query, Mr. V. Shahinyan,
    Head of the Personal Assaults Division, stated, "...The RoA Deputy
    Prosecutor General forwarded a written directive to the Avan and
    Nor Nork District Prosecutor regarding the criminal case of bodily
    assault on Lusineh Barseghyan, instructing the district office to
    initiate an examination of the facts pertained therein."

    "Hetq" sent a similar letter of inquiry to Chief of Police
    Alik Sargsyan. On April 8, we received a response from the Chief
    Investigative Department of the RoA Police signed by Lieutenant-Colonel
    S. Tzaghikyan. The response answered none of the questions we had
    raised. Below is an excerpt of the police statement.

    "...Regarding the points raised in your letter that the crime committed
    against Lusineh Barseghyan wasn't solved due to the fact that a full
    and exhaustive preliminary examination wasn't carried out and due to
    professional negligence, it is worth noting that a detailed review of
    the investigation executed by the Nor Nork investigative unit reveals
    that the entire matter was implemented adhering to the strict letter
    of the law according to the obligations as specified within the RoA
    Criminal Code of Jurisprudence, that all possible measures were taken
    to ensure an exhaustive and multi-faceted examination of the case and
    that all necessary juridical steps were taken during the preliminary
    investigation."

    As to why the police failed to directly answer our questions and what
    investigative measures weren't enacted in order to reveal those guilty
    of the crime, we'll cover at a later date.
Working...
X