Higher Court Renders Guilty Verdicts In Royal Armenia Case

HIGHER COURT RENDERS GUILTY VERDICTS IN ROYAL ARMENIA CASE
By Ruzanna Stepanian

Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
Nov 29 2007

Armenia’s Court of Appeal on Thursday handed lengthy jail sentences
on two prominent businessmen establishing their guilt on charges they
were cleared of by the lower court last summer.

Gagik Hakobian, the leading shareholder in the Royal Armenia
coffee-packaging company, was found guilty of large-scale organized
fraud, smuggling, tax evasion and forgery, and one of the company’s
top executives Aram Ghazarian was found guilty of tax evasion,
smuggling and forgery. They were sentenced to six and two years in
prison, respectively. The Court also ruled on confiscation of half
of the defendants’ property, but worth no more than 455 million drams
(about $1.5 million) in material damage caused to the state.

Hakobian will also have to pay a dram equivalent of about $556,000
to a private company in compensation of financial damages caused to it.

Presiding judge Suren Ghazarian said the Court of Appeal had found
the verdict of the lower court baseless and the charges originally
brought against the defendants by prosecutors totally proven.

The judge deducted 21 months from Hakobian’s jail term – the period
when he was in pre-trial detention at the National Security Service’s
jail. Therefore, his prison term is now four years and about three
months, beginning in October 2007.

Aram Ghazarian, who like Hakobian spent nearly two years in pre-trial
detention, was released from serving out the main sentence after
amnesty was applied to him.

Hakobian and Ghazarian were arrested and charged in October 2005 after
publicly accusing senior customs officials of corruption. They spent
nearly two years in prison before getting a sensational acquittal by
Judge Pargev Ohanian in July 2007.

State prosecutors were quick to challenge the ruling at the Court
of Appeals and the latter issued an arrest warrant for Hakobian last
September citing his failure to attend the hearings. The businessman,
who had returned from Spain, insisted he never intended to flee the
country and visited Spain to improve his health condition. The court,
however, refused to grant him bail pending trial.

Remarkably, Judge Ohanian was fired by President Robert Kocharian in
October after the Justice Council had found him to be in breach of law
while adjudicating on a number of unrelated cases. The move, however,
was seen by many as retaliation for his controversial acquittal of
the Royal Armenia businessmen three months earlier.

Aram Ghazarian, who was released from custody after the verdict was
pronounced, told RFE/RL he is going to appeal the verdict at the
higher instance "because the appeals court has in fact legitimized
the 21 months he spent in detention."

He said the purpose of the verdict is to take over their business. "I
cannot say who wants to do that. But it will be clear shortly,"
Ghazarian said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS