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Court reverses payoffs to heirs of slain Armenians

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  • Court reverses payoffs to heirs of slain Armenians

    Fresno Bee, CA
    Aug 22 2009



    Court reverses payoffs to heirs of slain Armenians

    Published online on Friday, Aug. 21, 2009
    Bee staff and wire services


    A federal appellate court invalidated a California law Thursday that
    allowed heirs of Armenians killed in the Turkish Ottoman Empire nearly
    a century ago to seek payment on the life insurance policies of dead
    relatives.

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

    For the thousands of ethnic Armenians in the central San Joaquin
    Valley, the ruling is the latest in a series of setbacks as they seek
    official recognition of what they consider a genocide.

    "I feel our government is continuing to enable genocide denial," said
    Richard Sanikian, a Fresno resident and member of the Armenian
    National Committee.

    Sanikian said that he didn't know of plans for any local protest of
    the court ruling, which favored German insurers. Ethnic Armenians had
    sued the insurers.

    "What we need to do, though, is keep the pressure on our government to
    do the right thing and acknowledge the Armenian genocide."

    The court 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 federal government does not recognize the mass killings of
    Armenians during World War I as genocide, but the California
    Legislature did in 2000 when it enacted the disputed law.

    About half of the people of Armenian descent living in this country
    reside in California. The 2000 census showed that more than 10,000
    Armenians lived in Fresno County.

    Varoujan Der Simonian, executive director of the Armenian Technology
    Group -- a Fresno-based nonprofit group that provides support for
    Armenian farmers -- said he was frustrated that the federal government
    had put yet another roadblock in the way of the Armenians.

    "We're not talking about current geopolitical issues, but about
    something that happened in World War I when the U.S. and Turkey were
    not allies," Der Simonian said.

    "Just because we're allies now, that doesn't correct past wrongs."

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

    "The ruling is wrong. It's a disaster," Kabateck said. "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."

    If the ruling is not set aside, it would prevent Armenian heirs from
    claiming inheritances and prohibit California and other states from
    marking the anniversary of the onset of the ethnic bloodshed that
    claimed the lives of up to 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1919
    in what is now eastern Turkey, Kabateck said.

    He alleges European banks and insurers illegally retained assets
    valued in 1915 at about $15 million, a sum worth substantially more at
    today's value.

    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.

    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.

    "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 said.

    Thursday's ruling reversed a lower court judge who refused to dismiss
    another class-action suit against two German life insurers and their
    parent company.

    Turkey long has denied that the loss of so many Armenian lives
    constituted genocide. Instead, Turkey describes the deaths as
    resulting from civil unrest that accompanied the collapse of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    The appellate court agreed with the German companies that California's
    policy improperly conflicted with the federal government's foreign
    policy aims.

    Attorney Neil M. Soltman, who represents the German insurers who
    brought the appeal, said he and his clients were pleased but not
    surprised by the court's ruling.

    "Today's ruling is consistent with what are now a significant number
    of recent decisions in the Supreme Court, the Ninth Circuit and the
    California Court of Appeal holding a variety of California statutes
    unconstitutional because they interfered with the federal government's
    exclusive authority over foreign policy. In that sense the decision
    was entirely expected."

    http://www.fresnobee.com/local/cr ime/story/1609121.html
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