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Court Ends Armenian Genocide Museum Challenge in Washington

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  • Court Ends Armenian Genocide Museum Challenge in Washington

    Court Ends Armenian Genocide Museum Challenge in Washington

    NATIONAL NEWS | JULY 24, 2014 12:52 PM
    By Michael Doyle


    WASHINGTON (Fresno Bee) -- A federal appeals court may have ended, once
    and for all, an extraordinarily protracted legal fight over a proposed
    Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial.

    In a 37-page decision, on July 15, the US Court of Appeals for the DC
    Circuit unanimously upheld a 2011 trial judge's order awarding the
    property intended for the museum to the Cafesjian Family Foundation.

    The three-judge panel's decision rejected competing claims by the
    Armenian Assembly of America, which had sought a new trial. Most
    poignantly, though, the appeals court voiced dismay over what it
    called the "morass of litigation" that has entangled museum plans.

    "More than seven years and millions of dollars in legal fees later,
    much of the parties' work to achieve their dream of a museum appears
    to have been for naught, which is regrettable," Judge Robert L.
    Wilkins wrote. "Whatever happens next, hopefully our decision today
    can at least serve as the last word on this dispute's protracted
    journey through the courts."

    Hirair Hovnanian, chairman of the Armenian Genocide Museum and
    Memorial, said in a statement following release of the ruling Tuesday
    that "we hope the Cafesjian heirs keep the promise Gerry [Cafesjian]
    made to the courts, which was to use this property to build a museum."

    At one time, the late Cafesjian Family Foundation founder Gerald
    Cafesjian was a benefactor of the Armenian Assembly. Together, they
    planned the museum and memorial marking the period from 1915 to 1923,
    when by some estimates upward of 1.5 million Armenians died at the
    hands of the Ottoman Empire.

    In downtown Washington, project supporters bought a four-story
    National Bank of Washington building in 2000. Cafesjian provided
    funding and bought adjacent properties, with a clause that the
    properties would revert to his control if the project was not finished
    by December 31, 2010.

    Cafesjian and the Armenian Assembly subsequently had a falling out,
    leading to the seemingly endless court battles over control of the
    property.

    "With the benefit of hindsight, [the Armenian Assembly] may now think
    this deal improvident, but no sense of buyer's remorse can empower us
    to rewrite the plain terms of the contract to which they agreed,"
    Wilkins wrote.

    - See more at: http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2014/07/24/court-ends-armenian-genocide-museum-challenge-in-washington/#sthash.I1lXeHBb.dpuf

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