Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Debate over Armenian museum will continue at appellate hearing

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Debate over Armenian museum will continue at appellate hearing

    Centre Daily Times
    April 19 2014


    Debate over Armenian museum will continue at appellate hearing

    By Michael Doyle

    WASHINGTON -- The legal fight over a proposed Armenian Genocide Museum
    and Memorial has lasted nearly as long as the horrors the project is
    supposed to commemorate.

    Soon, the bitter wrangling will reach a crucial crossroads.

    On Monday, in a courthouse about 10 blocks from the run-down site of
    the proposed museum, three appellate judges will sort through the
    dispute, which has outlasted several of the key parties. The museum's
    future might hang in the balance.

    "There is no doubt we are committed to building the museum in
    Washington, D.C.," Edele Hovnanian, the treasurer of the Armenian
    Assembly of America's board of trustees, said Friday. "We are
    absolutely committed."

    The case before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
    Circuit is still called Armenian Genocide Museum and Memorial v.
    Gerard L. Cafesjian, though this has become a misnomer. Cafesjian, the
    businessman and philanthropist who won an earlier round, died last
    year in Naples, Fla., at the age of 88.

    Another man once at the center of the dispute, former Cafesjian
    lieutenant John J. Waters Jr., was convicted last month in Minneapolis
    of 25 felony counts relating to embezzlement from Cafesjian. Waters is
    awaiting sentencing.

    Years ago, Cafesjian, Waters and the Armenian Assembly of America
    leadership were allies. They wanted to build a center marking the
    period from 1915 to 1923, when by some estimates upward of 1.5 million
    Armenians died at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.

    In downtown Washington, project supporters bought a four-story
    National Bank of Washington building in 2000. Cafesjian provided
    funding and bought adjacent properties, with a clause that the
    properties would revert to his control if the project wasn't finished
    by Dec. 31, 2010.

    Relations eventually collapsed and the first in a series of suits and
    countersuits was filed in 2007. In 2011, U.S. District Judge Colleen
    Kollar-Kotelly ruled that the property belonged to Cafesjian's
    foundation, of which Waters once served as vice president.

    "The court sincerely hopes that after years of fighting legal battles,
    the parties can put aside their differences and accomplish the
    laudable goal of creating an Armenian genocide museum and memorial,"
    Kollar-Kotelly wrote in January 2011.

    That hasn't happened.

    Instead, the fight that Kollar-Kotelly said "quickly escalated into an
    unfortunate exchange of accusations and allegations grounded in
    suspicion and mistrust" has ground ever onward. Though the museum has
    plans prepared and an online exhibit posted, the litigation has
    hindered efforts to raise the $100 million or so needed for
    construction and operations.

    The Armenian Assembly of America has appealed its trial-court loss,
    contending in part that Kollar-Kotelly had previously undisclosed
    "ties" to the Cafesjian side. Kollar-Kotelly had contributed, as had
    Cafesjian, to the Metropolitan Museum of Art's purchase of expensive
    modern glass art by an artist whom Cafesjian also sought for the
    Armenian genocide museum.

    "If the assembly had known of the shared and beneficial interest
    between Judge Kollar-Kotelly and Cafesjian as investors in
    contemporary studio glass art, it would have moved for Judge
    Kollar-Kotelly's disqualification," attorneys for the Armenian
    Assembly of America declared in an appellate brief.

    Attorneys for the Cafesjian Family Foundation didn't address the
    judicial recusal question in their appellate brief, which focused on
    other parts of the dispute.

    "I hope that the (appellate) decision will finally resolve the case,"
    the foundation's attorney, John B. Williams, said Friday, while noting
    that "there is always the Supreme Court."

    The 30-minute oral argument Monday comes three days before the events
    that traditionally recognize the genocide. In this, Congress has
    likewise continued to struggle.

    By a 12-5 vote, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved a
    resolution April 10 that's intended to "remember and observe the
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide." That may be the resolution's
    high-water mark.

    Vigorously opposed by the Turkish government, and historically viewed
    skeptically within the State Department and the Pentagon, this
    genocide resolution has an uncertain future. Senate rules will make it
    easy for a single lawmaker to block the measure.

    Turkey questions the casualty count and denies there was a systematic
    effort to exterminate the Armenian people. Some American diplomats and
    military professionals fear antagonizing Turkey, a key NATO ally.

    A like-minded resolution in the House of Representatives, authored by
    freshman Rep. David Valadao, R-Calif., and backed by 50 co-sponsors,
    hasn't moved since it was introduced last year. Visiting Turkey this
    month, House Speaker John Boehner effectively called the measure dead.

    "Don't worry," the Ohio Republican said, according to Turkish news
    accounts. "Our Congress will not get involved in this issue."

    In the meantime, lawmakers are participating in Armenian-American
    community events, with Valadao and Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif., expected
    at a flag-raising ceremony Thursday at Fresno, Calif., City Hall and
    Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., joining the annual march through the Los
    Angeles-area Little Armenia.


    Read more here:
    http://www.centredaily.com/2014/04/18/4141326/debate-over-armenian-museum-will.html?sp=/99/188/#storylink=cpy

Working...
X