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Karagiosian trail: Jury sides with officer, awards $150K

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  • Karagiosian trail: Jury sides with officer, awards $150K

    Burbank Leader , CA
    April 6 2012


    Karagiosian trail: Jury sides with officer, awards $150K

    Winning attorney calls city defense 'a horrible use of the taxpayers' money.'

    April 06, 2012|By Maria Hsin, [email protected]


    A jury on Thursday awarded an Armenian American police detective
    $150,000 for claims that he faced on-the-job discrimination and
    harassment because of his ethnicity, his attorney said.

    The detective who filed the lawsuit, Steve Karagiosian, testified in
    Los Angeles County Superior Court that detectives and sergeants in the
    Police Department regularly used derogatory terms - such as `towel
    heads' - in referring to Armenians.

    The decision comes two weeks after a jury awarded former Burbank
    Police Deputy Chief William Taylor nearly $1.3 million based on claims
    that he was fired in retaliation for refusing to sign off on the
    terminations of minority officers, and for raising concerns about how
    a sexual harassment incident was being handled.

    `The Burbank Police Department has been proven to have ethnic
    harassment within its department,' said Karagiosian's attorney,
    Solomon Gresen, after the jury's verdict was announced. `Det.
    Karagiosian had complained for years, and the jury's verdict should
    demonstrate to the city that this is a problem that needs to be
    immediately addressed.'

    Named `Officer of the Year' in 2007, Karagiosian is still employed
    with the department.

    Even with the jury coming down on his side, Gresen said his client
    feared the verdict would create a whole new set of problems back at
    the department.

    `Mr. Karagiosian is gratified that the jury found in his favor, but
    fears retaliation from the city attorney's office and the Burbank
    Police Department,' Gresen said.

    While the jury must still make determinations on more specific
    questions, Burbank City Atty. Amy Albano said the city was
    disappointed with the verdict.

    `What was interesting in the verdict is that the amount awarded was
    reduced,' Albano said, noting that the amount was lower than the
    suggested $225,000 because the jury felt Karagiosian could have
    avoided some of the damages because some of the incidents were not
    reported to the city.

    `The city takes issues of harassment very seriously,' Albano said.
    `When we are informed, we take appropriate action. That was done in
    this case. If not informed about an issue of harassment, the city is
    not able to take an action.'

    Jurors deliberated Karagiosian's case for about a day before
    delivering its verdict.

    http://articles.burbankleader.com/2012-04-06/news/tn-blr-0407-jury-sides-with-officer_1_jury-sides-verdict-solomon-gresen

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