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  • When trust is broken

    Boston Globe, MA
    Dec 9 2007


    When trust is broken
    Longtime volunteer allegedly embezzled from Armenian charity

    By Christina Pazzanese
    Globe Correspondent / December 9, 2007

    He was a trusted coach, an athletic director, and board member who
    spent 30 years volunteering for a fraternal organization in which
    everyone greets each other as "brother" and "sister." But now, Raffi
    Donoyan stands accused of embezzling more than $120,000 from that
    same charitable group in Watertown, one that promotes Scouting and
    athletic activities for Armenian-American children.

    more stories like this"This is one of our darkest days," said Ara H.
    Margosian, a Watertown-based lawyer and executive board member of
    Homenetmen Eastern Region Inc. "It's an embarrassing time in our era
    to say a faithful member stole our money.

    "This is being betrayed by a family member."

    Donoyan, 49, is accused of stealing money from the organization by
    taking cash withdrawals and writing checks to himself from its bank
    account from November 2003 to August 2005, according to the state
    attorney general's office. When he was confronted initially, Donoyan
    stated that the Internal Revenue Service had taken the money, the
    attorney general's office said.

    Donoyan was arraigned Wednesday in Middlesex Superior Court on two
    counts of larceny over $250, a felony. He pleaded not guilty and was
    released without bail. He's due back in court on Jan. 2 for a
    pretrial conference.

    If convicted, Donoyan could get up to five years in state prison for
    each count, or be fined up to $25,000 and spend up to two years in
    the Middlesex House of Correction, said Harry Pierre, a spokesman for
    the attorney general's office.

    When he was asked about the charges, Donoyan declined to comment as
    he stood inside the Cambridge courthouse Wednesday afternoon awaiting
    arraignment. Patrick E. Sheehan, a lawyer who appeared with Donoyan
    in court but said he has not been hired to represent him, declined to
    comment on the case when he was contacted Thursday at his office.

    The case has rocked the Watertown nonprofit organization, which
    supports youth soccer and basketball teams, as well as Scouting,
    athletics, and cultural and social events. While the group has not
    filed for bankruptcy, the reported theft, Margosian said, has been
    "devastating" financially, creating a deep hole out of which the
    group is still trying to climb.

    "We just want our money back so these kids have future opportunities.
    He took everything, just about every cent we have."

    Margosian said the missing money represents years of accumulated
    savings, donations, and fund-raising, much of it done by children
    through car washes, bake sales, dances, and Christmas caroling. On
    Jan. 5 each year, many children go door-to-door singing Armenian
    Christmas carols and handing out calendars with photos of children
    from each chapter playing sports and participating in Scouting
    activities. It's often the year's biggest fund-raiser, Margosian
    said. The money, he said, was set aside to help pay for activities
    such as four-day camping trips for Scouts and for travel over the
    July Fourth holiday to participate in the Homenetmen Regional Games,
    held every year in one of the chapter cities.

    For 30 years, Donoyan had been a club member and longtime volunteer
    coach and athletic director who was "pretty influential" and "pretty
    well-liked," Margosian said. "He really was friendly with people. He
    was perceived as Mr. Homenetmen, always helping out."

    more stories like thisWell-known in the Armenian-American community,
    Donoyan was a Watertown native and longtime resident who moved out of
    town last year. "He was a trusted person," Margosian said. "The guy
    is good. He makes you a believer."

    The theft was discovered in July 2005 when airline tickets Donoyan
    was to have purchased for 200 athletes participating in the
    Homenetmen World Games never materialized, Margosian said. With just
    a week left before the games, which were held in Athens, many
    athletes and their families started to get worried.

    "People were asking, 'Where are the tickets? Where are the tickets?'
    " Margosian said. The jig was up when club officials called the
    travel agency and learned that Donoyan had not paid for the tickets.

    With little time and no money, many athletes weren't able to attend
    the games, an event for which most had spent months training,
    Margosian said. "Some of their families planned their whole summer
    vacations around this."

    After the "initial shock," anger set in as "substantial evidence"
    pointed to Donoyan as the culprit, said the club's treasurer, Robert
    Kalantari. "When you work with volunteers, it's all based on trust.
    It's tough to deal with."

    Hoping simply to retrieve the stolen money, officials of the
    organization first tried to settle the matter quietly with Donoyan to
    avoid providing grist for local gossip, Margosian said. When that
    didn't work, Kalantari alerted the Public Charities Division of the
    attorney general's office.

    Since the incident, the organization also has had to work hard to
    regain the trust of members, Margosian said. Many wanted to know how
    Donoyan apparently managed to take such a large amount of cash over
    such a long period of time without being caught. A small number of
    members even left the group over the incident.

    "The individual did it, but they were upset at the organization,"
    Kalantari said. "They were saying, 'How could this happen?' "

    "It really hurt us," Margosian said. "I don't think we've healed."

    Homenetmen was founded in 1918 in Constantinople (now Istanbul) to
    assist children left as orphans by the Armenian genocide.

    The organization's Eastern Region in the United States has 10
    chapters, including groups in Chicago, Detroit, New York,
    Philadelphia, Rhode Island, and Washington, D.C. The Western Region
    covers the West Coast. In all, 25,000 members on five continents
    participate.

    The Boston-area chapter, the largest of all those in the Eastern
    Region, Margosian said, opened in 1974 and has about 300 members.
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