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LA Slaying May Solve Mystery of 2 Others

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  • LA Slaying May Solve Mystery of 2 Others

    LA Slaying May Solve Mystery of 2 Others

    Tori Richards Contributor
    AOL News

    HOLLYWOOD, Calif. (April 26, 2010) -- Somebody really wanted to make sure
    Khachik Safaryan was dead.

    An assassin shot the 43-year-old man through the right side of his temple,
    on each side of his forehead, and finished him off with a bullet to the
    chest. Safaryan's daughter Lusine, 8, was also killed with gunshots to each
    side of her head.

    The case remained unsolved for two years until Safaryan's wife, Karine
    Hakobyan, 38, was shot in the back of her head last month as she parked her
    car. Now authorities have arrested and charged a man with her murder. The
    suspect, Alberd Tersargyan, told police he was 73 years old but authorities
    believe he is 59, the Los Angeles Times reported.

    Sources say Tersargyan was romantically interested in Hakobyan, who spurned
    his advances, according to KTLA-TV in Los Angeles, quoting an unidentified
    family friend. Law enforcement sources also told the Times that Tersargyan
    may have been obsessed with Hakobyan and had been stalking her.

    Police are investigating whether the killer of Karine Hakobyan, here in an
    undated family photo, also killed her husband and one of their daughters two
    years ago.
    Tersargyan was charged Thursday with one count of capital murder with the
    enhancement of lying in wait in connection with Hakobyan's death.

    He remains jailed without bail and could face the death penalty if
    convicted, according to court records. Los Angeles police detectives are
    still working on the case, hoping to find enough evidence to charge him with
    the other two slayings as well.

    Tersargyan knew Hakobyan when they both lived in their native Armenia,
    according to KTLA-TV. He also befriended Hakobyan's husband and daughter
    while still holding a romantic interest in the woman.

    The Safaryan family immigrated to the United States several years ago after
    winning a contest that paid for their move here. Apparently Tersargyan
    moved, too.

    Safaryan got a job as a supermarket clerk, and Hakobyan worked as a hospital
    administrator. They had two young daughters and lived quietly in an area of
    Hollywood that was an enclave for Armenian immigrants.

    Then, on Dec. 11, 2008, the family's 12-year-old daughter returned home from
    school to a horrific death scene. Her younger sister was slumped on a couch
    in the living room, where a decorated Christmas tree stood next to a
    television set. In a bedroom, her father was lying on the ground, his head
    propped up against a nightstand and partially covered by a jogging suit.
    Blood spatters were on the wall, and a switchblade knife was next to his
    body, according to a coroner's report.

    Detectives also found several cigarette butts on the foyer floor of the tidy
    home, but no shell casings. Neighbors reported hearing a popping sound at
    2:27 p.m., half an hour before the bodies were discovered, the coroner's
    report said.

    "This was a professional hit," LAPD Detective Michael Whelan told AOL News.
    "We think we have a motive behind all of this, but I can't discuss that
    now."

    Whelan would not provide information on Tersargyan or his role in the first
    two killings -- whether he hired someone else or participated himself.
    However, prosecutors have charged him with being the actual gunman in the
    third death.

    After the two murders, Hakobyan moved her daughter to another nearby
    apartment complex where other relatives lived. A reward was offered by the
    city of Los Angeles, but her family's case went cold until she was slain in
    a parking lot adjacent to her home.

    A break in the case that led them to Tersargyan came Monday, police told The
    Associated Press. Detectives arrested Tersargyan at his home and found a
    handgun that matched the ballistics in Hakobyan's shooting. Other weapons
    were found at his home as well.

    "Tersargyan personally discharged the firearm," Sandi Gibbons, a spokeswoman
    with the Los Angeles County district attorney's office, told AOL News.

    The lone survivor of the family's slaughter is now 14 years old and living
    with her grandparents near the apartment she used to share with her mother,
    who was buried last week following an emotional funeral, Whelan told AOL
    News.

    "We just want them to find the people who did this, so they can finally get
    their punishment," the girl told the Los Angeles Times.

    Whelan said she was doing well, considering what happened to her, and has
    the love of an extended family.

    "She's very intelligent and very well-grounded despite this horrific thing
    that has happened to her," Whelan told the Times. "She's held up in some
    regards better than some of the family members around her."
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