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Loyola Launches Genocide Studies Program With Donation

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  • Loyola Launches Genocide Studies Program With Donation

    LOYOLA LAUNCHES GENOCIDE STUDIES PROGRAM WITH DONATION
    By Steven M. Ellis, Staff Writer

    Metropolitan News-Enterprise, CA
    http://www.metnews.com/articles/2007/geno100907 .htm
    Oct 9 2007

    Loyola Law School announced the launch of a genocide studies program
    yesterday after receiving $100,000 from alumni Mark J. Geragos and
    Brian S. Kabateck as part of a settlement of life insurance benefit
    claims left unpaid in the wake of the Armenian genocide.

    Joined by co-counsel Vartkes B. Yeghiayan, Geragos, a 1982 Loyola
    graduate, and Kabateck, a 1989 graduate, presented a check to Loyola
    Dean David W. Burcham and Professor Stanley A. Goldman and announced
    the foundation of the Center for the Study of the Law & Genocide in
    a press conference at the school's downtown campus.

    Kabateck said the donation represents seed money to build a center for
    the study of genocide issues worldwide from the Armenian genocide to
    the present, including the Holocaust during World War II and current
    events in the Darfur region of Sudan.

    According to the Armenian National Institute, an organization that
    describes itself as being dedicated to the study, research and
    affirmation of the Armenian genocide, the Turkish Ottoman Empire
    massacred or forcibly deported 1.5 million Armenians between 1915
    and 1923.

    The current Republic of Turkey, successor to the Turkish Ottoman
    Empire, denies that the events constitute "genocide," calling the
    1.5 million figure "grossly erroneous" and attributing the deaths of
    Armenians in that period to "intercommunal" political, rather than
    ethnic and religious, conflict.

    Goldman citeed the example of Raphael Lemkin, a lawyer of Polish-Jewish
    descent whose interest in the plight of Armenians led him to coin
    the term "genocide" in 1943 and to lobby the League of Nations to
    criminalize such conduct prior to World War II, said the program
    will study the crime in order to bring its perpetrators to trial and
    provide victims with redress.

    "Genocide is a 20th century concept," he said, "but slaughter of
    groups is as old as time."

    The program is the first of its kind in the country and will offer
    classes every other year on related law topics, Goldman said. It will
    also present programs for the bench and bar.

    The funds for the center come from part of a $20 million settlement
    with New York Life Insurance Co. for unpaid life insurance benefits
    to victims of the Armenian genocide.

    The case began with Yeghiayan, who determined in the late 1980's and
    early 1990's that approximately 2,000 policies issued by the company in
    the names of genocide victims remained unpaid. He approached Kabateck
    and Geragos to enlist their help in pursuing benefits on behalf of
    surviving heirs, Kabateck said.

    Yeghiayan, Kabateck, and Geragos are all descended from survivors of
    the Armenian genocide.

    After successfully lobbying the state Legislature in 2006 to reopen
    the statute of limitations in order to pursue the matter, the three
    filed a class action suit against New York Life in the U.S. District
    Court for the Central District of California in November of 1999.

    In January 2004 the company settled, agreeing to pay all valid claims
    relating to the policies and to contribute at least $3 million to
    Armenian civic and charitable organizations. Kabateck said that this
    amount was later increased to $7 million because so few heirs of
    policy holders remained, leaving an additional $4 million in funds
    after the initial distribution of benefits.

    He also said that suits currently remain pending in the U.S. District
    Court for the Central District of California against Germany's Victoria
    Insurance Company, Deutsche Bank and Dresdner Bank.

    Victoria is accused of similarly withholding unpaid benefits from life
    insurance policies, and the banks are accused of wrongfully taking
    Armenians' property to Germany and freezing Armenian bank accounts
    at the outbreak of World War I.

    A similar suit against French insurer AXA Corporation for unpaid life
    insurance benefits was settled in 2005.

    Geragos said that the timing of the announcement of the program was
    somewhat ironic, given that a Congressional committee is to consider
    House Resolution 106, which would formally recognize the Turkish
    Ottoman Empire's actions as genocide, this week.
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