Celebrity Attorney Sues LA Times Over Armenian Insurance Stories

Bloomberg Law
Joyce E. Cutler
Staff Correspondent
  • Articles were allegedly “based on unreliable information”
  • Reporting prompted California State Bar investigation

Southern California plaintiffs’ lawyer Mark Geragos sued the Los Angeles Times, alleging the newspaper defamed him in a series of stories over a $17.5 million settlement for Armenian genocide insurance cases.

The lawsuit filed against the Times and three reporters comes one year after the newspaper ran stories that Geragos alleges defamed him and painted him in a false light. Geragos and Brian Kabateck were two of the lawyers involved in groundbreaking cases that allowed Armenians to recover insurance payments for the deaths of their family members killed in a genocide that ravaged their country more than a century ago.

The newspaper on March 23, 2022, reported that corrupt acts spoiled the reparations process by diverting funds to outsiders.

“Then, after manufacturing allegations against Mr. Geragos and pressuring the State Bar of California to launch a public investigation of the long-closed matter, the LAT relied on this very investigation to repeatedly defame Mr. Geragos in subsequent articles, claiming that its continued defamation of him was protected by the fair report privilege,” the lawsuit said.

“The totality of the circumstances, including the repeated defamation and portrayal of Mr. Geragos in a false light, in the face of credible evidence disproving the narrative advanced by the LAT, demonstrates Defendants’ malice towards him,” according to the complaint.

The newspaper Friday declined to comment on the filing.

The stories on the lawsuit against AXA SA, a French insurance company, were “based on unreliable information from witnesses whose veracity should have been questioned,” the lawsuit said. “Moreover, the LAT ignored the information and evidence provided by Mr. Geragos’ offices and published the story they had already written in complete disregard for the truth.”

The California State Bar last September announced it was investigating Geragos and Kabateck over the insurance settlement dispersals. The bar, in announcing the ethics probe, thanked the newspaper “for its excellent reporting on the distribution of Armenian Genocide settlement funds.” The bar further stressed that the announcement isn’t “an indication of any misconduct by the attorneys being investigated.”

“Once we did a public records request of the state bar and saw that what I had previously thought was bad journalism by the LA Times had crossed the line to malicious, we had to do it,” Geragos said Friday. “And I’m confident that the discovery and litigation is going to show that they not only had an agenda, but one that was motivated by malice.”

A bar representative didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the status of the investigation.

Geragos and Kabateck uncovered the theft of settlement funds by co-class counsel, who the pair sued to recoup the funds and ensure amends were made, the lawsuit said.

The complaint alleges state claims of libel, false light invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Geragos is represented by Geragos & Geragos APC.

The case is Geragos v. Los Angeles Times Communications LLC, Cal. Super. Ct., No. 23STCV06397, case management notice filed 3/23/23.

Tania Sahakian: I am bridging the gap between Armenia and the outside world

Armenia –
   

Bridge IT helps companies to expand into or within Armenia, it supports business from A to Z. Bridge IT incorporates financial, legal, operational services as well as recruiting, PR and team management.

Tania Sahakian is the founder and advisor of Bridge IT. She acted as the Regional Director of one of INC 5000’s Fastest Growing Companies – DISQO – leading the Yerevan office foundation, talent and brand growth, and operations including financial, legal, logistics and government relations.

iTel.am spoke with her about Bridge IT’s idea, first steps and its development perspective.

The idea of Bridge IT and the first steps

Building, scaling companies & communities to create impact is my passion. Growing up all over the world has given me the blessing to be a bridge between cultures, societies and people. I have moved through various industries in my professional life in both public and private sectors and my one constant has been community building, connecting people and resources to make big things happen.

Since I moved to Armenia in 2011, my role has been bridging the gap between Armenia and the outside world. While I was at TUMO I received constant requests to connect people and businesses with talent in Armenia. The secret was out that you can find quality engineering and design talent in Armenia. I had become a de facto recruiter. Then as we launched and grew the DISQO offices in Armenia and not only outsourcing but we were building our main products here, the requests grew to not just talent but building companies in Armenia.

Armenia as a silicon mountain was starting to have more of a brand awareness. The war and conflict did not deter this. First, Armenians in the diaspora understood that the tech industry was something you could invest in and get a return on your investment. Then, international companies noticed. Ultimately, companies are looking for talent and they will go where the talent is. And our talent proved that living in a conflict area does not interrupt the quality production coming out of Armenia. Israel has done this for years and become the country with the highest number of tech companies in the world living in a conflict zone.

As I was receiving more and more requests to consult companies expanding into Armenia, and vice versa, Armenian companies expanding into the Northern American market, it was a natural move to launch a consulting firm to help make the process smooth for this transition.

Problems faced by international companies wishing to expand in Armenia

International companies are looking for opportunities to expand their teams with highly qualified professionals. Those companies that consider Armenia as a direction of expansion also lack knowledge, experience and connections. We help companies launch and expand in Armenia and Armenian companies expand to the USA, Canada.

When moving to Armenia 60% of companies failed because they don’t treat Armenia with the same business standard and practices that are locally accepted. Sometimes people rely on non-professional sources and contacts to move their business forward. The main gaps are:

•    not having an established local network,
•    understanding of the local culture,
•    underestimated effectiveness of brand visibility & PR,
•    lack of cross-functional management,
•    underestimated recruitment costs,
•    lack of an experienced team to guide them.

So we basically cover the gaps by developing and executing strategies and help businesses focus on their long term goals.

The feature of Bridge IT and functions the company perform

Our advantage is in-depth knowledge of the business environment in Armenia, the USA and Canada, extensive experience and connections that make the expansion process smooth and fast. We connect international companies to Armenia  and Armenian companies with the US and Canadian market for now, acting as a bridge to solve seemingly difficult problems quickly and smoothly.

The team

For now, the team is new, and soon we will start to fill it with specialists from Armenia, the US and Canada. Now we collaborate in a project format with the best professionals who have years of experience in business development, legal affairs, financial management, marketing, PR, logistics and human talent management.

Bridge IT’s upcoming projects and development perspective

We already have clients were serving both in Armenia and the US. The next steps are to make sure we establish ourselves, deliver and keep our reputation to attract more companies through case studies. Long term we need to be part of the branding story of ‘Come work from Armenia’ and ‘Invest in Armenian companies’.

For that we need to establish and grow the company's US-based headquarters, staffing the core team. In the next two years, to have a presence in Armenia in order to manage the activities more efficiently, grow our team and launch marketing campaigns targeting Armenia and Armenian companies for investment and growth.

Nune Grigoryan talked to Tania Sahakian



Armenian Duduk added to the permanent exposition of Geneva’s Ethnography Museum

The Armenian Duduk, a musical instrument inscribed on the UNESCO intangible heritage list, will be included in the permanent exposition of the “Geneva Ethnography Museum (Musée d’ethnographie de Genève), the Armen8an Embassy in Switzerland informs.

Ambassador Andranik Hovhannisyan handed over the Duduks durng a solemn ceremony at the Museum.

He thanked the management of the Museum and said in particular that “some see Duduk as a reflection of the Armenian soul, Duduk is not just another instrument, but the one that speaks to us, speaks in Armenian language.”

A brief Duduk performance and an introduction on its history and Armenian musical traditions followed. Representatives of the Armenian community of Geneva participated in the event.

https://en.armradio.am/2023/03/24/armenian-duduk-added-to-the-permanent-exposition-of-genevas-ethnography-museum/

RFE/RL Armenia Report – 03/24/2023

                                        Friday, 


Armenian Court Allows Ratification Of International Criminal Court Treaty

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with Constitutional Court judges, 
December 27, 2021.


The Armenian Constitutional Court paved the way on Friday for parliamentary 
ratification of the International Criminal Court’s founding treaty which could 
further strain Armenia’s relations with Russia.

Based in The Hague, the ICC is the first permanent international tribunal tasked 
with prosecuting war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and military 
aggression. Armenia was among 120 countries that signed its founding treaty, the 
Rome Statute, in 1998.

The Armenian parliament has still not ratified it, however. In 2004, the 
Constitutional Court ruled that the treaty runs counter to several provisions of 
the Armenian constitution which guarantee national sovereignty over judicial 
affairs.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government decided last December to ask the 
court to again look into the Rome Statute and determine its conformity with the 
constitution. Justice Minister Grigor Minasian argued that the constitution has 
been twice amended since 2004.

Minasian indicated at the time that Yerevan intends to appeal to the ICC over 
Azerbaijan’s military attacks on Armenian territory launched since May 2021

The Constitutional Court ruled that the Rome Statute conforms to the amended 
constitution. It said, among other things, that the two documents pursue 
identical goals enshrined in “universal values.”

The ruling came one week after the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Russian 
President Vladimir Putin over war crimes allegedly committed by Russia in 
Ukraine.

Ara Zakarian, an Armenian expert on international law, said a possible 
ratification of the ICC treaty would obligate the Armenian authorities to arrest 
Putin and extradite him to The Hague tribunal if he visits the South Caucasus 
country.

“If they promptly send the treaty to the National Assembly [for ratification] 
then it will mean that [the ruling] was agreed [with Pashinian’s government,]” 
Zakarian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “But in my view, the [ratification] 
process will be halted.”

Most of the current Constitutional Court judges have been installed by 
Pashinian’s political team.

Armenian law gives the government up to three months to request parliamentary 
ratification in such cases. Neither the government nor the ruling Civil Contract 
party commented on its next move.

By contrast, Russia was quick to react to the Armenian court ruling. Kremlin 
spokesman Dmitry Peskov was reported to say that Moscow will discuss its 
implications with Yerevan.

Earlier this week, a Russian law-enforcement agency opened a criminal case 
against an ICC prosecutor and judges who issued the “illegal” arrest warrant.

Russia has long been Armenia’s main ally and trading partner. Relations between 
the two countries have soured in recent months because of what the Armenian 
government sees as a lack of Russian support in the conflict with Azerbaijan.




Armenia, Azerbaijan ‘Still Far Apart’ On Peace Treaty

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia - Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan speaks during a news conference in 
Yerevan, February 22, 2023.


Armenia and Azerbaijan continue to disagree on key terms of a bilateral peace 
treaty discussed by them, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Friday.
The two sides have exchanged in recent months written proposals regarding the 
treaty which Baku hopes will help to restore full Azerbaijani control over 
Nagorno-Karabakh. Few of their details have been made public so far.

“There have been discussions, exchanges of views and some compromise language 
has been defined,” Mirzoyan told Armenian lawmakers. “Unfortunately, this does 
not apply to major, key issues of primary importance.”

“All those major issues of primary importance are still under discussion and the 
parties are quite far apart on the bulk of them,” he said without elaborating.

Parliament speaker Alen Simonian similarly said late last month that Yerevan and 
Baku still disagree on “three or four” elements of the would-be peace treaty. 
But he too did not disclose them.

Baku maintains that the peace accord must be based on five elements which it 
presented to Yerevan in March 2022. Those elements include mutual recognition of 
each other’s territorial integrity. This would presumably mean Armenian 
recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh.

Armenian leaders have been vague on such recognition in their public statements. 
They have said only that the treaty should address the “rights and security” of 
Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population.

The secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigorian, said earlier this 
month that Yerevan is seeking relevant security guarantees for the Karabakh 
Armenians. This may include the establishment of a “demilitarized zone” around 
Karabakh or “international presence” in the Armenian-populated territory, he 
said.




Azerbaijani Troops Accused Of Shooting At Karabakh Farmers

        • Artak Khulian

Nagorno-Karabakh - A vineyeard near Chartar, March 22, 2023.


Authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have accused the Azerbaijani military of 
systematically firing in recent days at Karabakh Armenian villagers cultivating 
land in their communities.

They said that a group of residents of Machkalashen, a village in Karabakh’s 
Martuni district, came under small arms fire from nearby Azerbaijani army 
positions as they worked in local vineyards on Thursday and Friday morning. 
Although none of them was injured by the gunfire, they had to stop their work, 
the interior ministry in Stepanakert said in a statement.

Hunan Grigorian, the mayor of the neighboring village of Sos, said Azerbaijani 
troops opened the fire despite the presence of Russian peacekeepers protecting 
the farmers.

“They used not only assault rifles but also heavy machine guns,” Grigorian said, 
adding that such incidents have been a regular occurrence in the last two weeks.

Similar shooting incidents were reported from another Martuni village, Chartar, 
earlier this week. Artyom Jivanian, a local farmer, said workers in his vineyard 
came under fire on Wednesday. They have still not returned to parts of the 
10-hectare vineyard close to Azerbaijani army positions, said Jivanian.

“People are now working in places not visible from the Azerbaijani positions,” 
he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “That way they can feel a bit safer.”

It was the third such incident reported by the Chartar mayor to Russian 
peacekeeping forces in the past week. He asked the peacekeepers to help ensure 
the security of local farmers.

Earlier in March, two other villages in Martuni also alleged Azerbaijani gunfire 
towards their residents engaged in agricultural work.

The reported incidents highlight tensions mounting in the conflict zone more 
than three months after Azerbaijan blocked the sole road connecting Karabakh to 
Armenia.

The Azerbaijani military has repeatedly accused Armenia this month of 
transporting military personnel and weapons to Karabakh and threatened to take 
“resolute” actions to stop the alleged shipments. Yerevan has strongly denied 
the allegations, saying that Baku may be preparing the ground for launching 
offensive military operations in Karabakh or along the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border.

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry released on Friday another purported footage of 
a Russian armored vehicle escorting a convoy of trucks along a dirt road running 
parallel to a section of the Lachin corridor blocked by Azerbaijani 
government-backed protesters. It portrayed the video as further proof of Baku’s 
allegations.

The Karabakh interior ministry insisted, however, that these and other vehicles 
using the barely passable road transport only civilians and “humanitarian cargo.”




U.S. Hails Pashinian’s Promise Of Peace Deal With Azerbaijan


Germany - U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian during the 
Munich Security Conference, February 18, 2023.


The United States welcomed on Friday Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s pledge to 
negotiate an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty which contrasted with his claims 
that Azerbaijan is planning another attack on Armenia.

“There will be a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and it will be 
based on the joint official statements adopted at the highest level,” Pashinian 
tweeted late on Thursday, repeating a statement made by him during a meeting of 
his cabinet held earlier in the day.

Speaking at that meeting, Pashinian described as an “act of aggression” 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s latest threats against Armenia. He said 
Baku is questioning Armenia’s “right to exist” and “leading the situation to a 
new escalation.”

However, Pashinian said in his ensuing Twitter post that “there won’t be а new 
escalation.” “The international community must strongly support this narrative,” 
he added.

Vedant Patel, a spokesman for the U.S. State Department, praised Pashinian’s 
tweet and shared it on his page.

“[Secretary of State Antony] Blinken is very engaged in facilitating peace 
discussions between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and we are encouraged by the 
progress made toward lasting and sustainable peace in the South Caucasus,” wrote 
Patel. “We very much appreciate Nikol Pashinian’s message on that progress.”

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks during a news conference in 
Yerevan, March 14, 2023.

Pashinian’s critics at home accuse him of making conflicting statements on the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. They say that his promise of a peace deal with Baku 
is illogical given Yerevan’s allegations about possible Azerbaijani aggression.

Pashinian charged on March 14 that Baku is seeking a “mandate to perpetrate 
genocide or ethnic cleansing in Karabakh.” “I consider the possibility of 
escalation to be high,” he told a news conference.

The Azerbaijani military has repeatedly accused Armenia this month of 
transporting military personnel and weapons to Karabakh and threatened to take 
“resolute” actions to stop the alleged shipments. Yerevan has strongly denied 
the allegations, saying that Baku may be preparing the ground for launching 
offensive military operations in Karabakh or along the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border.

The rising tensions followed Pashinian’s February 18 meeting with Aliyev which 
was organized by Blinken in Munich. Blinken spoke of an “opportunity to bring a 
peace agreement to fruition” when he commented on Armenian-Azerbaijani peace 
talks on Wednesday.

Pashinian complained last week that the Azerbaijani side is rejecting most 
Armenian proposals on the peace treaty and making more demands unacceptable to 
Armenia.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenia, Turkey agree to open border to third country citizens before tourist season

 TASS 
Russia –
Despite sharing a border, Armenia and Turkey don’t have diplomatic relations

YEREVAN, March 24. /TASS/. Armenia and Turkey have agreed to open their borders to citizens of third countries ahead of the tourist season, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Friday.

"We have agreed to open the border with Turkey to citizens of third countries ahead of the tourist season. Active efforts in this area are being made," he said at a meeting of the relevant parliamentary commission.

Despite sharing a border, Armenia and Turkey don’t have diplomatic relations. The two countries’ top diplomats signed protocols on the establishment of diplomatic relations and on the principles of bilateral relations in Zurich in 2009 but these protocols have not been ratified by either of the sides. On March 1, 2018, Armenia announced the annulment of the protocols. In 2021, the countries appointed special envoys for issues of settling bilateral relations.

Armenian top diplomat points to gap in positions of Yerevan, Baku on major issues

 TASS 
Russia –
On Wednesday, Ararat Mirzoyan said that Armenia is analyzing the Azerbaijani version of a peace agreement and will give its answer soon

YEREVAN, March 24. /TASS/. Armenia and Azerbaijan have managed to reach understanding on secondary matters, but there is a wide gap in their positions on important issues, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Friday.

"I can say that there are a lot of issues on which we have managed to reach a compromise with the Azerbaijani side. But the sides’ approaches to the most important topics are oceans apart," he said at a parliamentary commission meeting.

On Wednesday, Mirzoyan said that Armenia is analyzing the Azerbaijani version of a peace agreement and will give its answer soon.

Amid Armenia-Azerbaijan Tensions, IRGC Commander Visits Border Regions

Iran International
March 24 2023




Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Ground Force commander visited border regions in the northwest near Armenia and Azerbaijan where tensions between the two Transcaucasian countries have spiked. 

Brigadier-General Mohammad Pakpour visited an area under control of IRGC’s Ashura camp located around the common borders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, where a resumption of military conflict is feared. The two countries fought a war in 2020 over disputed territories and Yerevan has accused Baku of recent border incursions.

Although the Islamic Republic says it is neutral in the conflict but it has warned it would not tolerate changes to international borders.

Iranian media have reported in recent weeks that Azerbaijan is preparing for a potential attack on Armenia, without elaborating on the details. Earlier in the week, Aftab News, a website believed to be close to former President Hassan Rouhani and the Moderation and Development Party, quoted Baku’s Ambassador to Iran Ali Alizada as criticizing “smuggling of military supplies into Khankendi by Armenian separatists.” The area is called Stepanakert in Armenia. “Time to act,” he urged. 

Earlier in the month, Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan summoned the Iranian ambassador in Baku to protest the flight of an Iranian warplane on the border of the two countries. Ambassador Abbas Mousavi was told that the warplane continuously flew near the Azerbaijani border for more than 40 minutes at a distance of 3-5 kilometers on March 11.

After a gunman assaulted Azerbaijan’s embassy in capital Tehran, Baku says it is evacuating staff and family members from the country. The incident came amid increased tensions between the neighboring countries triggered by territorial conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia and Yerevan as well as over Baku's decision this month to appoint its first ever ambassador to Israel. 

Iran is dangerously implicated in regional tensions centered on Azerbaijan-Armenia that are exacerbated by fall-out from Russia’s war in Ukraine.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/202303243113

United States “very much appreciates” Armenian Prime Minister’s message on establishing peace

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 14:14,

YEREVAN, MARCH 24, ARMENPRESS. The United States said Friday that it “very much appreciates” Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s message on the progress toward peace in South Caucasus.

“Secretary Blinken is very engaged in facilitating peace discussions between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and we are encouraged by the progress made toward lasting and sustainable peace in the South Caucasus. We very much appreciate Nikol Pashinyan’s message on that progress,” US State Department Principal Deputy Spokesperson Vedant Patel tweeted, sharing the Armenian Prime Minister’s March 23 tweet.

Pashinyan tweeted on March 23: “There will be a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and it will be based on the joint official statements adopted at the highest level. There won’t be а new escalation! The international community must strongly support this narrative.”




BREAKING: Armenia’s Constitutional Court greenlights ratification of Rome Statute of the ICC

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 15:01,

YEREVAN, MARCH 24, ARMENPRESS. The Constitutional Court of Armenia on March 24 ruled that the Rome Statute – the treaty that established the International Criminal Court (ICC) – complies with the Constitution of Armenia.

The decision was released by Chief Justice Arman Dilanyan.

Justices Hrayr Tovmasyan, Arayik Tunyan and Yervand Khundkaryan expressed “special opinions”, i.e., reservations, he said.

The Armenian government re-launched the process of ratifying the Rome Statute in December 2022. Back then, the government applied to the Constitutional Court to check the compliance of Armenia’s present-day constitution (adopted in 2015) with the Rome Statute, because the process was disrupted in 2004 when the high court ruled that the Rome Statute contradicted the then-constitution which was adopted in 1995.

EU is committed to partnership with Armenia, building peaceful and prosperous South Caucasus – Toivo Klaar

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 15:23,

YEREVAN, MARCH 24, ARMENPRESS. The European Union is committed to partnership with Armenia and to building a peaceful and prosperous South Caucasus, the European Union’s Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in Georgia Toivo Klaar said March 24.

In a tweet, Klaar thanked the Head of the Armenian Mission to the EU, Ambassador Anna Aghadjanian for hosting a celebration of the second anniversary of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) between Armenia and the EU.

“Thank you Ambassador Anna Aghadjanian for hosting celebration of the second anniversary of Armenia-EU CEPA. The EU is committed to partnership with Armenia and to building a peaceful and prosperous South Caucasus. We support Armenia and Azerbaijan in achieving a lasting, comprehensive and fair peace,” Klaar tweeted.