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It was the kind of text message many teenagers might send.

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  • It was the kind of text message many teenagers might send.

    COLUMN ONE

    May 06, 2010 | Robert Faturechi

    It was the kind of text message many teenagers might send.

    Mike Yepremyan, 19, wanted to see his girlfriend, but she was hanging out
    with another girl. So he sent her a pouty text with a nasty comment about
    her companion.

    He hit send just after 5 p.m. on a Wednesday in November, triggering a
    series of events he could never have anticipated.
    By 9 p.m., two families had been devastated and a circle of friends had been
    torn apart.

    When Mike wasn't in class at Pierce College or working as a dispatcher for a
    private ambulance company, he could usually be found with his closest
    buddies. At Los Angeles Baptist, the private high school in the San Fernando
    Valley where they met, they were known as the Middle Eastern kids.
    Mike Yepremyan and Ohan Barsamian were Armenian. Ali Hosseini was Persian.
    They were a little louder than their classmates, a little more outgoing. For
    Valentine's Day one year, Mike borrowed money from his father to buy a
    long-stemmed rose for each of the 150 young ladies in their high school.

    When their parents set the table for one of the boys, they could expect to
    find all three waiting to be fed. Sleepovers were the norm. So when Mike
    showed up unannounced at Ohan's house after work Nov. 18, no one was
    surprised.

    All that was out of the ordinary was Mike's mood.

    He and his girlfriend, Denielle Wegrzyn, were fighting, a rarity. Mike
    worshiped her, always admiring her long blond hair. And she was learning
    Armenian for him. After two years of dating, she'd picked up numbers and
    common expressions.

    As the three teenagers discussed how to spend their night, Mike grumbled
    about a nasty exchange of text messages he'd just had with Denielle.

    Those messages and the events that unfolded that night are described in
    court records and in testimony from a preliminary hearing. Ohan, Denielle
    and others offered further details in interviews with The Times.

    Mike had hoped to see Denielle as soon as he got off work that night. He was
    disappointed to hear she was with Kat Vardanian. The two girls had met
    through mutual friends three months earlier. Mike didn't like Kat. He
    thought she dressed too provocatively, and he worried she might be a bad
    influence on his girlfriend, his friends said. Despite Mike's feelings,
    Denielle and Kat were growing closer.

    They had met up with friends for dinner in Glendale earlier in the evening.
    To avoid rush-hour traffic, they decided to kill time at a tobacco lounge in
    Burbank, a delay Denielle explained to Mike via text message. The girls were
    parked at a gas station in Kat's pearl-white Infiniti when Mike's response
    lit up Denielle's iPhone, tucked in the cup holder:

    "Every time u hang out with that bitch u guys get hookah. Is there something
    cool bout her n hookah that u enjoy so much?"

    In interviews and in courtroom testimony, Denielle described what happened
    next:

    Kat peered at the phone's screen.

    "Oh, I'm a bitch, huh?" she snapped.

    Denielle tried to calm her, but Kat grew irate. She grabbed Denielle's phone
    and scrolled down to Mike's number.

    "My brother is gonna beat him up," she said, according to Denielle's
    testimony.

    Kat picked up her own phone and dialed her sibling, Hovik Dzhuryan,
    switching to Armenian when he picked up. The words were incomprehensible to
    Denielle, until the end of the call.

    " Oot mek oot," Kat said, according to Denielle. "818." Denielle knew how to
    count in Armenian. Kat was reciting Mike's phone number.

    Alarmed, Denielle asked to be dropped off at her car, parked at Kat's house
    in Van Nuys. Once home, she sent Mike a text.

    "This night is so sad n now I'm home alone."

    Mike's response frightened her.

    "If by 12 u don't hear from me ... call the cops to cats house," he wrote.
    "Just in case ... but I promise nothing will happen."

    Ali and Ohan paid little attention to Mike's spat with his girlfriend. They
    left him at Ali's house in Granada Hills while they filled up at a nearby
    gas station. There, they got a call from Mike.

    "I'm gonna get in a fight," he said. "Just come back and I'll explain."

    The two rushed back. Mike looked pale. He said Kat's brother had called and
    said he wanted to fight, according to his friends.

    The three piled into Mike's car and began driving around aimlessly. The
    headlights on his gray Nissan Altima led them down Balboa Boulevard in
    Granada Hills and Victory Boulevard in Van Nuys. They talked about how to
    handle the mess Mike had created. The calls to Mike's phone continued, but
    the voice on the other end no longer belonged to Kat's brother. It was
    deeper and more confrontational.

    "Don't you know who I am?" the caller barked. "You never heard of me?"

    "No, who are you?" Mike responded.

    The call was cut off.

    Then the phone rang again.

    "OK, what you say right now is gonna determine what happens to you," the
    voice said. "Do you have any proof about why she's a bitch?"

    "I don't want to offend you," Mike replied.

    "Do you have any proof?" the voice asked.

    "Yeah, I do," Mike said hesitantly.

    The line went silent again.

    In the last in this string of calls, the voice demanded a meeting. "How
    about Glendale?" the caller asked. Mike insisted on the Valley, where the
    boys already were. He picked the Sears parking lot in North Hollywood. It
    was well-lighted, wide open.

    Of the three friends, Mike was the only one with an imposing physique -- a
    broad chest and thick arms. None was the fighting type. Mike began calling
    friends. I need backup, he told them. Most had excuses, but three didn't.
    Two were guys Ali and Ohan had never met. Their sudden presence unnerved
    them.

    Together, a reinforced crew of six, they waited in the Sears parking lot,
    lighted up like a baseball field.

    The group was relieved. Half an hour had passed, and the other side had not
    shown. Then about 8:30 p.m., a black BMW with no front license plate pulled
    in.

    Two young men stepped out. The driver, the shorter of the two, wore an
    orange hoodie. His hair was trimmed close, the same length as his beard. The
    passenger was taller and had a leather jacket wrapped around a wide frame.

    They approached Mike and his friends.

    The conversation started calmly, in Armenian.

    The strangers grilled Mike. Why had he called Kat the name he did? Why had
    he disrespected her?

    Mike tried to explain.

    "When you translate it, it's a lot worse," he said. "I didn't mean it like
    that."

    The exchange seemed to be coming to a peaceful conclusion when the taller
    stranger blew up, getting in Mike's face and shouting threats. Without
    warning, the other guy slugged Mike in the face.

    Mike stumbled back, then gathered himself. He was ready to retaliate.

    The taller stranger intercepted him with what appeared to be a sweeping
    punch aimed at the back of Mike's head. His fist was clenched inside his
    jacket sleeve. When he made contact, there was a boom and a shower of
    sparks, witnesses said.

    Mike collapsed, killed by a gunshot wound to the head. White smoke lingered
    over his body. Authorities later found a single 9-millimeter shell casing
    beside a pool of blood on the asphalt.

    The strangers fled in the BMW.

    A nurse at Mission Community Hospital called Mike's parents at 2:30 in the
    morning. She wanted Art Yepremyan and Ani Atajyan to come to the hospital.

    She wouldn't say why.

    Ani called Mike's cellphone. Then she tried Ohan's. A police officer
    answered.

    "You have to go to the hospital," he said.

    "Is he OK?" Ani pleaded.

    "You need to go to the hospital."

    That's when they knew.

    Mike was their only son. For 15 years, until the birth of their daughter, he
    was their only child. The three had left their native Armenia together. Art
    and Ani worked at small ethnic markets in the Valley for years, making less
    than minimum wage, eventually saving enough to take Mike out of public
    school, where they feared he'd get caught up with the wrong crowd.

    The man who shot Mike has not been identified.

    Authorities say the driver of the BMW was Vahagn Jurian, 22, of Van Nuys,
    described in courtroom testimony as Kat's cousin. Jurian is believed to have
    fled to Armenia, which does not have an extradition treaty with the U.S. The
    district attorney's office has charged him with being an accessory after the
    fact to the killing.

    Kat, now 21, was arrested and charged with murder and conspiracy to commit
    assault. Prosecutors contended she had set the night's events in motion when
    she allegedly told her brother to beat up Mike. Prosecutors did not charge
    her brother, however, citing a lack of evidence.

    At a preliminary hearing in Van Nuys last month, Kat sat handcuffed to a
    chair, sobbing as Ohan, Ali and Denielle recounted what happened that night.

    The courtroom was packed, the atmosphere tense. Friends and relatives of
    Mike filled one half of the room; Kat's family and friends crowded the other
    side.

    A line of bailiffs stood between them.

    Kat's lawyer, Anthony Brooklier, said that even if Kat did tell her brother
    to attack Mike, she never could have anticipated what would happen.
    Jurian's father, Abraham, took the stand and was asked whether his son had
    called him in tears the day after the shooting and told him he'd gotten into
    a fight that had ended with someone's death. The father said he couldn't
    remember. After consulting with his lawyer, he acknowledged that his son had
    made such an admission.

    At the close of the hearing, Superior Court Judge Karen Nudell dismissed the
    murder charge against Kat, but ordered her to stand trial on the conspiracy
    count.

    When the judge dismissed the murder charge, Mike's mother wailed. A bailiff
    told her to be quiet or leave.

    Brooklier and Kat's father said that Kat, her brother and other family
    members declined to be interviewed for this article.

    Art Yepremyan is rarely without a cigarette these days. On a recent
    afternoon, he sat in the office of his flooring business, thumbing through
    old cards and photos. He pointed out a plaque Mike had given him,
    commemorating a star for which the teenager had paid to name after his
    father. Art says he steps out of his Granada Hills home some nights and
    looks up in the star's direction.


    Copyright 2010 Los Angeles Times
    [email protected]

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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