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Former lawmaker was not afraid to buck the system

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  • Former lawmaker was not afraid to buck the system

    Sarasota Herald-Tribune, FL
    June 14 2008


    Former lawmaker was not afraid to buck the system

    By Mark Zaloudek
    Published Saturday, June 14, 2008 at 4:30 a.m.
    Last updated Saturday, June 14, 2008 at 8:59 a.m.

    Sarasota - Ned Parsekian, a former senator in New Jersey who also held
    other state posts, savored his reputation for challenging business as
    usual in government.

    The lawyer and outspoken Democrat, who later retired to Sarasota and
    became a leader in the St. Armands Residents Association, died of
    heart failure Monday at his home. He was 86.

    He served in the New Jersey Senate from 1965 to 1967 and ran
    unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination for governor of the state
    in 1969.

    He was often at odds with the "back-scratching system" he encountered
    there in the 1950s and 1960s, said his son, Tom Parsekian of Laguna
    Niguel, Calif.

    As head of New Jersey's Division of Motor Vehicles in the early 1960s,
    Parsekian tried to put an end to the practice of ticket-fixing by
    government officials. As a state senator, he called for a probe into
    organized crime.

    "He was considered a maverick because he was willing to take on a
    system that had been in place for so many years," his son said.

    Challenging the status quo was not easy, and those who had a vested
    interest in maintaining it may have contributed to his unsuccessful
    bid for re-election to the state Senate in 1967 and subsequent
    election defeats, including a congressional bid in 1974, his son said.

    Parsekian's moral compass came from his hard-working immigrant
    parents, who fled Armenia during a 1915 massacre, Tom Parsekian said.

    The elder Parsekian's father, a tailor, died in the early 1930s,
    leaving Parsekian's mother, a seamstress, to raise her three sons
    during the Depression.

    "They were raised with this great sense of decency, integrity and
    grace," Tom Parsekian said.

    After serving as a pilot and bombardier in the Army Air Forces during
    World War II, Ned Parsekian graduated from Columbia University and
    Columbia Law School on the GI Bill. He worked as a federal law clerk
    and as a lawyer in private practice before accepting a post in the New
    Jersey attorney general's office in the mid-1950s. He returned to
    private practice after several years as a public servant.

    In addition to his son, he is survived by his wife of 57 years,
    Corinne; two daughters, Donna Lynn of Maywood, N.J., and Sandy
    Parsekian-Martorell of Barcelona, Spain; a brother, Ara of Ocean
    Grove, N.J.; seven grandchildren; and one great-grandchild. Another
    daughter, Nancy Parsekian Hamilton of Bradenton, died in April at 53
    of cancer.

    A memorial service for Parsekian will be held Aug. 29 in Ridgewood,
    N.J.

    Memorial donations may be made to the Armenian General Benevolent
    Union, 55 E. 59th St., Seventh Floor, New York City, NY 10022, for
    worldwide educational, cultural and humanitarian programs.
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