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First-ever Armenian and deaf Burbank police community academies grad

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  • First-ever Armenian and deaf Burbank police community academies grad

    Burbank Leader, CA
    March 1 2013


    First-ever Armenian and deaf Burbank police community academies graduate

    March 1, 2013 | 7:36 a.m.

    After getting an inside look at Burbank police operations - including
    demonstrations by the Special Weapons and Tactics team and
    presentations about gangs, forensics and force - members of the
    first-ever Armenian and deaf community academy classes have graduated.

    `You probably know a lot more now about the police department than
    when we began,' Burbank Police Officer Joshua Kendrick said Wednesday
    to the more than 30 Burbank residents who completed the seven-week
    course.

    Tigran Khachikyan, who graduated from the deaf class, said that before
    taking the course, he had problems with police and struggled to
    understand their operations.

    `I thought they didn't value me as a citizen,' he said in sign
    language. `[Now], I feel like I really understand their job, how
    they're working so hard for us.'

    The academy helps strengthen the department's community partnerships,
    especially as the city's demographics continue to change, said interim
    Police Chief Scott LaChasse, who drove in from a conference in Palm
    Springs to attend the graduation.

    `There are people that have had negative contacts with us,' LaChasse
    said. `What we need to do is repair those relationships - this is one
    step in that process.'

    Graduate Joseph Hovanessian said his favorite parts of the course were
    learning about the court system, patrol procedures and detective case
    management.

    As a graduate, Hovanessian is now eligible to volunteer with the department.

    In the future, he said he'd like to get more residents from the
    Armenian community, especially youth, to sign up for the course..

    This spring, the academy will likely be held for English and Spanish
    speakers, with the Armenian and deaf classes returning in the fall,
    officials said.

    Graduates also appreciated the humor that officers brought to each class.

    On his way out, one graduate told Kendrick he hopes to see him soon.
    He hesitated for a moment and cracked a smile. `Not...'

    `Not in a bad way,' Kendrick said, and they both burst into laughter.

    -- Alene Tchekmedyian, Times Community News

    http://www.burbankleader.com/the818now/tn-818-0301-firstever-armenian-and-deaf-burbank-police-community-academies-graduate,0,7853596.story

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