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Getting A Hold On The Truth

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  • Getting A Hold On The Truth

    GETTING A HOLD ON THE TRUTH

    Los Angeles Times
    http://www.latimes.com/news/custom/topofthet imes/topstories/la-me-kidnap-20100503,0,6473187.st ory
    May 3 2010

    Former wrestler says he abducted a man to get evidence of a contract
    killing, but prosecutors say it was a $1-million kidnapping gone wrong.

    As a young wrestling champion in Soviet-era Armenia, Vagan Adzhemyan
    was accustomed to head-on confrontations with his foes.

    Twenty-five years later, he says, a business dispute in Southern
    California resulted in the hiring of a hit man to kill him, and
    Adzhemyan reverted to the mano-a-mano ways of his past.

    He and at least one cohort accosted the man whom he believed hired the
    hit man in an underground parking garage in the San Fernando Valley.

    They beat him, zapped him with a Taser and hustled him into the
    back of a van. Over the next five days, with the help of a South Los
    Angeles sandwich shop owner and part-time marijuana cultivator, they
    shuttled the bound and blindfolded man from place to place to avoid
    detection. Adzhemyan also secretly recorded interrogations in which
    he attempted to get the man, Sandro Karmryan, to implicate himself
    in the supposed murder for hire.

    "They put me in a corner," Adzhemyan, who speaks with a heavy Armenian
    accent, said in a recent interview from the Metropolitan Detention
    Center in downtown Los Angeles. "I had two choices: Either kill this
    guy or record him."

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    Federal prosecutors see it differently.

    They contend that Adzhemyan, 42, is nothing more than a common criminal
    who kidnapped Karmryan and demanded a $1-million ransom. They said
    Karmryan was bleeding from an untreated bullet wound and on the verge
    of death when he was rescued during a raid by Los Angeles Police
    Department SWAT officers. Adzhemyan later concocted the story about
    being in fear for his life in an attempt to justify his actions,
    they said.

    "What he says -- and what he did -- just doesn't make any sense,"
    Assistant U.S. Atty. Robert E. Dugdale said.

    After hearing Adzhemyan's account on the witness stand at his trial
    last year, U.S. District Judge Jacqueline Nguyen told jurors that even
    if everything he said were true, there was still no legal justification
    for his actions.

    Adzhemyan's attorney, Harland Braun, interpreted it as a not-so-subtle
    hint to find his client guilty.

    Nonetheless, after four days of deliberations, the jury was
    deadlocked. Half of the 12-member panel accepted Adzhemyan's argument
    that he had no choice but to do what he did.

    Prosecutors get another chance at the case in a retrial that began
    last week. This time, the judge has barred any evidence related to
    why Adzhemyan committed the crime, ruling that it is irrelevant to
    his guilt or innocence.

    So-called justification defenses are rarely allowed. They can be
    presented only if a judge determines, among other factors, that the
    defendant was facing imminent danger of serious harm or death and that
    there was no reasonable legal alternative to the defendant's action.

    So, much of what follows is a story that jurors will probably not hear:

    Born in Yerevan, Armenia, in 1968, Adzhemyan began wrestling as a boy.

    At age 17, he says, he was European champion in his weight class in
    freestyle wrestling. He says he was invited to the United States to
    pursue wrestling by the then-coach of the U.S. Olympic team.

    As an adult in the U.S., Adzhemyan had long since stopped wrestling
    competitively, but his life continued to revolve around the sport,
    he said. He runs a wrestling school in North Hollywood, he says,
    and organizes international tournaments. He is still recognizable in
    the Russian Armenian community based on past success in the sport.

    His recent troubles began when a friend, Suren Garibyan, asked if he
    could help arrange financing for a woman who wanted to buy a house.

    Adzhemyan said he approached Karmryan, an acquaintance who worked at
    a friend's trucking company and dabbled in mortgages on the side.

    Adzhemyan said Karmryan agreed to secure a $500,000 loan for which
    Adzhemyan and Garibyan would each receive 5% finders' fees.

    But as months passed and the loan did not go through, Adzhemyan said,
    he became suspicious. After spending $25,000 of his own money to
    help the would-be borrower clean up her credit, Adzhemyan says, he
    ultimately discovered that the $500,000 loan had already been funded
    and that Karmryan and others were planning to keep the money.

    Adzhemyan said he made some of these discoveries on a wrestling
    tournament trip to Armenia and Russia last year, which is also when he
    learned that Karmryan had supposedly taken out a contract on his life.

    Unsure what to do, Adzhemyan said, he hid out in Moscow for three
    months because he did not want to return to Los Angeles and place his
    wife and children in jeopardy. He said he believed the police would
    do nothing because he had no proof that his life was in danger. So
    he decided to get some proof, he said.

    Adzhemyan and Garibyan tracked Karmryan to his parents' apartment
    in Van Nuys, where he was visiting. With him was Arshok Rogoyan,
    whom Adzhemyan accused of being the hired killer.

    When the two men got out of their truck early on the morning of July
    29, Adzhemyan, Garibyan and, according to prosecutors, two other
    men they had brought along as additional muscle pounced. They began
    beating Karmryan and Rogoyan, and shocking Karmryan with a Taser.

    During the scuffle, Rogoyan drew a gun and shot Karmryan in the
    buttocks. Rogoyan managed to escape as Karmryan was forced into
    the van.

    As Adzhemyan and his crew drove around with their badly bleeding
    prisoner in the back of the van, Adzhemyan said, he realized he
    hadn't thought his plan through -- that he didn't know where to go
    next. He began making phone calls to friends and associates until he
    made his way down the list to Galvin "Shaun" Gibson. Adzhemyan said
    he met Gibson while shopping for commercial property on a stretch of
    Crenshaw Boulevard where Gibson owns a sandwich shop.

    He said that he told Gibson of his "very difficult situation," and
    that Gibson reluctantly agreed to help. He allowed Adzhemyan to keep
    Karmryan in an upstairs office at the restaurant and, later, at his
    home in Mira Loma, where the second floor had been converted to an
    indoor pot farm.

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    When SWAT officers raided the house Aug. 3, they found Karmryan
    lying on a mattress "with a bruised face, Taser burns on his body,
    ligature marks on his wrists and ankles, barely able to move [and]
    ... near death," according to court records. A large pit bull had
    been left to guard him.

    Karmryan had been regularly beaten during his captivity, prosecutors
    allege. It was under these conditions that Adzhemyan conducted his
    interrogations -- sometimes at gunpoint -- and got Karmryan to "admit"
    that he had tried to arrange to have Adzhemyan killed. A recording
    of the interrogation was played for jurors.

    Prosecutors contend that the only victim in the case is Karmryan. At
    the first trial, Karmryan's parents testified that they received a
    $1-million ransom demand for their son's release. Relatives in Russia
    received similar demands, the parents said.

    Garibyan has admitted his role in the case, but did not agree to
    testify against Adzhemyan, according to sources familiar with the
    matter. Gibson has pleaded not guilty. He did not testify in the
    first trial and is not expected to testify in the retrial.

    Though it's unclear how much of his story he will be allowed to tell
    this time around, Adzhemyan will testify again.

    "You couldn't keep him off the stand," Braun said.
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