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Court Rejects Law On Genocide Survivor Claims

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  • Court Rejects Law On Genocide Survivor Claims

    COURT REJECTS LAW ON GENOCIDE SURVIVOR CLAIMS

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08/21/ court-rejects-law-on-genocide-survivor-claims/
    Aug 21st, 2009

    SAN FRANCISCO (Combined Sources)-A federal appeals court Thursday
    rejected a California law that allowed heirs to Genocide victims to
    seek payment on life insurance policies of victims' relatives.

    The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the law amounted to
    unconstitutional meddling in US foreign policy.

    It based its 2-1 ruling on a 2003 U.S. Supreme Court decision that
    struck down another California law designed to help Holocaust survivors
    collect on Nazi-era insurance policies.

    "The decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals is an affront to the
    Armenian American community and, if allowed to stand, sets a
    dangerous precedent by rewarding the Turkish Government's efforts
    on the federal level to deny and cover-up the Armenian Genocide,"
    said Armenian National Committee-Western Region board chairman Vicken
    Sonentz-Papazian.

    "The message this decision sends is that if you can threaten, cajole
    and stonewall the U.S. government into inaction on a 'foreign policy'
    issue, you can eliminate a valid and righteous claim of an American
    citizen in a U.S. court of law," added Papazian.

    The Los Angeles Times reported Friday that Judge Harry Pregerson
    dissented from the majority opinion by Judges David R. Thompson
    and Dorothy W. Nelson. Pregerson wrote that the District Court
    had correctly judged the California statute as "within the state's
    traditional area of competence" in regulating the insurance industry,
    according to the LA Times.

    Lawyer Brian Kabateck, who represents Armenian-American heirs, plans
    to appeal.

    "The ruling is wrong. It's a disaster," Kabateck told the Associated
    Press. "The one million Armenians that live in California today
    have been told by the court that even the use of the word 'genocide'
    by a government is illegal."

    Vartkes Yeghiayan, the lawyer for lead plaintiff Father Vazken
    Movsesian of St. Peter Armenian Church, described the ruling as
    "devastating," reported the Los Angeles Times.

    The California Legislature passed the law giving heirs of Armenians who
    died or fled to avoid persecution until the end of next year to file
    claims for old bank accounts and life insurance policies. European
    banks and insurers are said to have retained assets valued in 1915
    at about $15 million, a sum worth substantially more at today's value.

    Class-action lawsuits brought by Armenian descendants in California
    and other states led to a $20 million settlement with New York Life
    Insurance Co. in 2005 and a $17 million settlement the same year with
    French life insurer AXA.

    William Werfelman, a spokesman for New York Life, said the company
    had no intention of trying to get back any of the money it paid out
    under the 2005 settlement, the Associated Press reported.

    "By acting honorably, and in keeping with our company values of
    humanity and integrity, New York Life made many friends in the
    Armenian community and we cherish these friends," Werfelman told the
    Associated Press.

    Thursday's ruling reversed a lower court judge who refused to dismiss
    another class-action suit against the German life insurance companies.

    U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, who as a state assemblyman co-wrote
    the law that was overturned by the 9th Circuit, was perplexed by the
    court's reasoning, according to the Associated Press.

    "You have a group of people that has a government that hasn't had
    the will to recognize the genocide and as a result of that failing,
    are being told they don't have valid insurance claims," he told the AP.
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