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  • Armenian victims' heirs to get checks

    Armenian victims' heirs to get checks
    Some will see payment as the result of an insurance suit related to
    genocide.
    By Vanessa Colón / The Fresno Bee
    11/12/06 05:53:14


    Some heirs of Armenian genocide victims will get a surprise in their
    Fresno mailboxes this week: a hefty check.

    More than 30 descendants in Fresno might each receive a payment of
    between $1,000 and $44,000.

    The money comes from a $7.9 million settlement reached between New York
    Life Insurance Co. in New York and heirs of genocide victims under the
    Turkish Ottoman empire. Between 1915 and 1923, 1.5 million Armenians
    died at the hands of the Turkish Ottoman empire. The settlement was
    reached in 2004.

    Anahid Eleazarian of Fresno is among those expecting a check. Her father
    was a college professor who had a New York Life insurance policy.
    Eleazarian was 3 years old when her father was captured and killed
    during the genocide. Surviving family members moved to Lebanon, where
    four of the six siblings stayed. She left Lebanon in 1947 for the United
    States and settled in Fresno in 1949.

    Now 94, Eleazarian said she doesn't know how much money she'll get but
    she will share it with her brothers' and sisters' children. She says
    she's the only one among her siblings to see this day come. In her eyes,
    the money is secondary.

    Most important, she said, is that "they are acknowledging" the genocide.
    The Turkish government says the deaths were the result of civil unrest,
    not genocide.

    William Werfelman, a spokesman for New York Life, said: "New York Life
    has made many friends in the Armenian community as a result of the
    positive outcome of this case. It is great to see another milestone
    reached in the process."

    The class-action lawsuit alleged the company owed unpaid life insurance
    benefits. New York Life agreed to resolve more than 2,000 insurance
    policies issued to Armenians before 1915 and contribute $3 million to
    Armenian civic organizations.

    Of the thousands of claims reviewed, only 2,515 could be traced to
    Armenians who purchased policies before 1915. Payments depend on the
    amount of the policy purchased. Armenians in Armenia will receive more
    than half of the settlement ' $3.4million. Armenians in the United
    States will share $2.6 million, and Armenians in France will split
    $656,413.

    More than 600 policies were not claimed because there are no heirs, said
    Glendale-based attorney Vartkes Yeghiayan. That money will go toward
    Armenian charitable organizations. Yeghiayan said it took a long time to
    distribute the settlement money because documents had to be translated
    from seven languages, including Arabic, Armenian and Turkish.

    New York Life provided a list of names that was placed on a Web site so
    families could determine whether their ancestors had purchased policies.
    Only 11 heirs had a copy of the policy. The rest found out through the
    Web site: www.armenianinsurancesettlement.com.

    Documents such as birth certificates, death certificates and marriage
    certificates were used to trace family lineage.

    Following the New York Life case, the same lawyers reached a $17 million
    settlement in 2005 between heirs of Armenian genocide victims and French
    life insurance company AXA, Yeghiayan said. The lawyers are waiting to
    get a list of names from AXA so families can find out who's eligible to
    receive money.

    Earlier this year, the same attorneys filed a class-action suit against
    two German banks, he said. They are seeking to recover millions of
    dollars of alleged bank deposits of Armenian genocide victims.

    Yeghiayan said of the New York Life settlement: "It's nice to get one
    out of the way."


    The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (559) 441-6313.
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