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Criminally Inclined? How Come So Many Armenians From RA Turn To Crim

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  • Criminally Inclined? How Come So Many Armenians From RA Turn To Crim

    CRIMINALLY INCLINED? HOW COME SO MANY ARMENIANS FROM RA TURN TO CRIME IN U.S.?
    Edik Baghdasaryan

    hetq
    11:52, July 30, 2012

    During my recent trip to the States, I found myself waiting in the
    office of an Armenian attorney in Glendale. I wanted to speak to some
    of his clients.

    A man of about 40 entered with his wife of the same age. I had made
    some acquaintances with members of the Armenian Bar Association and
    the contacts were bearing fruit.

    On the day in question, I was serving as one of their assistants.

    I began to perform my duties - to listen attentively to their
    stories and familiarize myself with their cases. For the most part,
    the clients were former residents of Armenia.

    I took notes and was amazed with what I heard - robbery, fraud,
    bank embezzlement, credit card theft...Here's one of their tales.

    A woman wound up in a police entrapment scheme. Her husband had forced
    her into committing the crime. When the lawyer told her the prosecuting
    attorney was asking for a 180 jail sentence, the woman broke into
    tears. Sitting alongside, her husband told her "keep your mouth shut".

    The husband was wearing a thick gold chain around his thick neck. In
    Glendale, sporting a thick gold necklace is tantamount to saying one
    also drives a BMW. No matter how poor they are or in debt, all former
    RA residents in Los Angeles must have a BMW and thick gold chains.

    Over the course of Saturday and Sunday, when the banks are closed,
    this family racked up $25,000 of purchase on a fake credit line of
    $2,000. In one store, they purchased a $1,500 computer. Three hours
    later they came back and bought three more. Elsewhere, they purchased
    a meat grinder and other household goods.

    When the woman made a feeble attempt to weasel her way out, the
    attorney pulled out an envelope, leaned over, and showed her the
    photos taken on closed circuit cameras. Everything was there in black
    and white. The woman said nothing more and began to wail even louder.

    The attorney advised them to come clean so that he could draft an
    appropriate defense.

    The crafty pair had started out with a small purchase on their credit
    line. Then, with the use of a cell phone, they gave a bank account
    number from which to draw more funds for the credit line. It later
    turned out that the account had been frozen in 2010.

    Since it was Friday evening and the banks were closed, the fraud was
    only discovered a few days later.

    The attorney asked what they had done with all those computers and the
    couple, in tandem, said they had sent them as gifts to Armenia. He
    then asked who had used the fake bank account and credit line. The
    woman said nothing and looked at her husband.

    The husband, hands placed on the table, was trying to convey the
    fact that he had done the dirty deeds but, in reality, he had made
    her an accomplice.

    "I have no idea where the money came from. Whoever did it should come
    forward and say so," said the play acting husband. He then told his
    wife to leave the room.

    The attorney raised his voice a bit and told the man he shouldn't
    have ordered his wife to leave.

    "Brother, you committed the thefts by purchasing those items. It
    was your credit card and you knew about the $2,000 limit. They have
    all the photos. If you have the money, you'd better pay them back,"
    the attorney advised.

    The man responded that they didn't have that amount of money. The
    attorney advised him to pay at least a portion to avoid a jail
    sentence. The man said he'd go and think about it.

    I have no idea how the case will end. Go to Los Angeles and you can
    hear countless similar tales on a daily basis.

    Mark Bledstein, a local attorney who has served Armenian clients for
    many years says the following about Armenians charged with various
    crimes.

    "For many just coming from Armenia, it's not a crime to cheat the
    government. At least this was the general perception of the first wave
    of immigrants. This country is awash in money and they think they
    can steal some of it. The second generation has changed a bit. The
    third generation will have become Americans and won't think like that
    at all."

    I decided to sit in at some of the trials. The first was at the court
    in Burbank. I looked at the trial schedules affixed to the wall. I
    spotted three Armenian names involved in criminal and six names for
    civil trials.

    (To be continued)

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