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Ninth Circuit Rejects Armenian Genocide Suit

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  • Ninth Circuit Rejects Armenian Genocide Suit

    NINTH CIRCUIT REJECTS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SUIT
    By Annie Youderian

    Courthouse News Service
    http://www.courthousenews.com/2009/08/24/N inth_Circuit_Rejects_Armenian_Genocide_Suit.htm
    Au g 24 2009

    (CN) - The 9th Circuit dismissed a lawsuit for insurance benefits
    filed by victims of the Armenian genocide. The court said the claims
    were trumped by the U.S. government's refusal to use the term genocide
    to describe the systematic slaughter of more than 500,000 Armenians
    during and after World War I.

    The plaintiffs, all of Armenian descent, cited a California code
    that gives "Armenian Genocide" victims until 2010 to file insurance
    claims. Their policies had been issued by two German insurers owned
    by Munich Re.

    The district court dismissed their claims for unjust enrichment and
    constructive trust, but allowed the plaintiffs to sue for breach
    of contract.

    Munich Re challenged the ruling on several fronts, including that the
    state law was preempted by the foreign affairs doctrine. The state
    code isn't valid, Munich Re argued, because the U.S. government doesn't
    officially recognize the Armenian Genocide, the term used to describe
    the mass killings ordered by a political party in the Ottoman Empire
    known as the Young Turks.

    The Pasadena-based appellate panel voted 2-1 to dismiss all claims,
    saying they were preempted by federal foreign policy.

    Senior Circuit Judge Thompson cited the Bush administration's efforts
    to quash a 2007 Armenian Genocide Resolution, which sought official
    recognition of the genocide. Former Secretary of State Condoleeza
    Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates argued in a letter to House
    Speaker Nancy Pelosi that passage of such a resolution "could harm
    American troops in the field, constrain our ability to supply our
    troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and significantly damage our efforts
    to promote reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey."

    Then-President George W. Bush added that the resolution "is not the
    right response to these historic mass killings, and its passage would
    do great harm to our relations with a key ally in NATO and in the
    global war on terror."

    No further action was taken on the resolution.

    These and other statements by top-ranking U.S. officials "clearly
    establish a presidential foreign policy preference against proving
    legislative recognition to an 'Armenian Genocide,'" Judge Thompson
    noted.

    "We conclude that [the California code] impermissibly infringes on
    the federal government's foreign affairs power."

    In a dissenting opinion, Judge Pregerson argued that California has
    the authority to regulate genocide insurance claims.

    "There is no express federal policy forbidding California from
    using the term 'Armenian Genocide' in the course of exercising its
    traditional authority to regulate the insurance industry," Pregerson
    wrote.
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