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Phantom-Grave Seller Nabbed

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  • Phantom-Grave Seller Nabbed

    PHANTOM-GRAVE SELLER NABBED
    By Alex Dobuzinskis, Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    March 13 2006

    GLENDALE - A former Forest Lawn employee who sold phantom grave
    plots to unsuspecting buyers has been charged with grand theft and
    embezzlement in a scheme that cost the alleged victims more than
    $67,000, authorities said.

    Robert Ovsepyan, 34, of Burbank was extradited from Armenia over the
    weekend and is being held without bail. Prosecutors filed charges
    against him while he was on the lam abroad, alleging he ripped off
    people in 10 fraudulent sales of nonexistent grave plots.

    Armenian authorities agreed to extradite Ovsepyan because he is a
    U.S. citizen and overstayed his visa in Armenia. He faces a maximum
    of 35 years in prison if convicted of all the charges.

    "It's good for the victims. ... They're going to feel good, they're
    going to feel satisfied that justice prevailed," Glendale police Sgt.
    Ian Grimes said.

    "But I think it sends a larger message to people in Glendale and people
    in Armenia that you're not going to be able to use one place to hide,
    commit a crime in one place and hide in another."

    Starting in November 2004, Ovsepyan allegedly supplemented his income
    from Forest Lawn Memorial-Park, where he sold grave plots for a living,
    by selling nonexistent plots as well. All the victims who bought them
    from him were Armenian-Americans he knew.

    The buyers complained to Forest Lawn when they never received paperwork
    for the sales, and Forest Lawn cooperated with police when they
    suspected fraud. Ovsepyan stopped showing up for work in October 2005.

    The buyers were different ages and included individuals and entire
    families. Their losses ranged from $3,000 to $14,000.

    One elderly woman had been saving two years to buy a plot for herself,
    hoping to keep from burdening her children, police said.

    In a prepared statement, Forest Lawn officials said they are
    cooperating with the Glendale Police Department.

    "We are working with the families to achieve a swift resolution and
    are taking all necessary steps to protect against future wrongdoing,"
    read the statement attributed to John Warren, the senior vice
    president of marketing for Forest Lawn. "Forest Lawn maintains a
    strict confidentiality policy and wishes to reserve comment at this
    time to protect the privacy of the families we serve."

    Police are unsure how Ovsepyan decided who to engage in legitimate
    sales and who to target for fraud.

    "Some of them trusted him because of past association or relationship,"
    financial crimes Detective Tigran Topadjhikyan said.

    "One of the victims had a husband that was deceased, and Ovsepyan
    was a friend of the husband's. So it was the association that built ...
    the trust."
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