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Chief Plaintiff In Landmark Genocide Case Dies At 95

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  • Chief Plaintiff In Landmark Genocide Case Dies At 95

    CHIEF PLAINTIFF IN LANDMARK GENOCIDE CASE DIES AT 95

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    March 4, 2011 - 11:26 AMT 07:26 GMT

    Martin Marootian, a retired pharmacist who became the chief plaintiff
    in a landmark class-action suit against New York Life Insurance
    Company, died Friday of natural causes at his home in San Diego. He
    was 95.

    Marootian was born in New York. His parents, who were from Kharpert,
    escaped the Genocide, but their family was massacred. Graduating from
    the Connecticut School of Pharmacy in 1939, Marootian served with
    the Yale Medical Unit in the South Pacific. He met his future wife,
    Seda Garapedian, at a church picnic and began a new life in Southern
    California in 1955.

    The Marootians were involved in the Armenian Allied Arts, the
    Armenian Film Foundation, St. Gregory's Armenian Church, USC Friends
    of Armenian Music and the Armenian Professional Society, which honored
    Martin with the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2004.

    Marootian never forgot his relatives who died in Kharpert. To anyone
    who visited, his study was a treasure trove of books, survivor
    testimonies and newspaper clippings about the Armenian Genocide. Year
    after year, like so many Armenians, he took part in commemoration
    events to acknowledge the genocide.

    But it wasn't until 1994 that he had the chance to play a more
    prominent role in history, Asbarez.com reports.

    "I was looking through the newspaper," he recounted in 2005, "and
    I read that the lawyer Vartkes Yeghiayan was looking for anyone who
    had an insurance policy from New York Life Insurance Company."

    Marootian remembered that his sister had an insurance policy from their
    uncle, Setrak Cheytanian. "He bought the policy and paid every year,"
    Marootian said. "A lot of Armenians bought policies in those days."

    When Marootian's mother, Yeghsa, decided to come to America, his
    uncle gave the insurance policy to her, before perishing during the
    Genocide. From the early 1920s to her death in 1982, Yeghsa repeatedly
    tried to collect on the policy and was refused. "I was born in 1915
    in Manhattan and we couldn't have been any closer to the headquarters
    of New York Life," said Marootian. "But we were not able to collect
    on that policy."

    New York Life sold over 8,700 insurances policies to Armenians living
    in Ottoman Turkey in the period leading up to the Armenian Genocide
    in 1915. Yeghiayan had long suspected there were many Armenians like
    the Marootians, but to mount a lawsuit he needed proof. Marootian
    had that proof - a policy.

    It was the beginning of what would become a mammoth legal battle. New
    York Life denied there was a list of policyholders. Then they produced
    the list. New York Life then filed to have the case dismissed and
    tried in Europe. The California legislature responded by passing
    a special bill extending the statute of limitations and permitting
    Armenian-Americans to file suits in California against insurers to
    recover money from unpaid policies.

    The central issue was unpaid insurance, but hovering in the background
    was an even bigger issue - recognition of the Armenian Genocide in
    the U.S. courts.

    In 2004, the case was settled for $20 million. Money not claimed by
    descendants of the insured was to go to various charities and the
    Church. Judge Christine Snyder commended Marootian's tenacity. He had
    shown up to every hearing, every deposition. He had demonstrated by
    his very presence that he would not back down. "I remembered the New
    York Life advertisement: we are the company you keep," said Marootian.

    "I told that to the New York lawyers. I said I recognize the slogan,
    and in my family, you are the company my family kept for many years,
    and you didn't pay."




    From: A. Papazian
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