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After Seizures, Markarian Couple Had $2.54 In CIBC

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  • After Seizures, Markarian Couple Had $2.54 In CIBC

    AFTER SEIZURES, COUPLE HAD $2.54 IN CIBC
    By Paul Delean, The Gazette

    The Gazette (Montreal)
    June 15, 2006 Thursday
    Final Edition

    Retired businessman Haroutioun Markarian was on the road to
    Plattsburgh, N.Y., yesterday, when he heard from his lawyer that he'd
    won big in his lawsuit against CIBC World Markets.

    "I was confident the wrongdoer would be punished, and the Canadian
    justice system did not let me down," said Markarian, 73.

    He had $300 to his name when he brought his young family to Canada
    from Egypt in 1962. A machine shop that he built "from nothing"
    was their ticket to a better life.

    By 1993, when he retired and sold his share of the business to his
    employees, he and wife, Alice, had assets in the millions.

    About $1.4 million was placed with CIBC Wood Gundy. After the brokerage
    seized and liquidated their holdings to pay off the trading losses
    of people they didn't know, they had all of $2.54 left at the CIBC.

    The Markarians had been clients of Harry Migirdic, a Wood Gundy
    broker who misled them about the documents they were signing, since
    the mid-1980s. Like them, he was an active member of Montreal's
    Armenian community.

    "I had faith in him," Markarian, 73, testified in Superior Court. "I
    felt fortunate to be served by a company vice-president."

    Markarian said he never would have signed guarantees for the trading
    losses of strangers.

    "Why would I risk the family fortune for people I don't know?"

    Though they still had substantial sums at other institutions, the
    couple said the CIBC seizure took a toll.

    "We had established a certain standard of living," Markarian said.

    "It was cut in half."

    Alice Markarian, 68, testified the events had a profound effect on
    her husband.

    "He didn't want to go to Armenian functions," she said. "He didn't
    want to face people who wanted to talk about (what happened). He felt
    humiliated personally."

    Son Arek, 38, said his father "was a respected man, a founding member
    of the Armenian community, one of the builders. It was a tremendous
    blow to his ego, his self-esteem. ... Losing half what you worked
    your life for, in one afternoon, at his age - it changed him."

    Markarian was thrilled by yesterday's decision, but the ordeal has
    shaken his confidence in Canada's financial institutions.

    "I'm very vigilant now. I don't trust anyone. Financial institutions
    are out for themselves. That's why investors have to watch their
    accounts very closely."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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