The Daily Caveat is written by Michael Thomas, a recovering corporate investigator in the Washington, DC-area.

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1/16/2006
Armenians Seeking Reparations File Class-Action Against German Banks
Some of the most satisfying investigative work I've done in my career concerned reparations issues and accusations. Whether the issue was art theft, stolen assets or war crimes exposure there is something uniquely fascinating about reaching back over the decades and utilizing a different set of investigative tools and methods to reveal as much as possible about the truth of what went on. For good or ill, we are all living in the world our parents (and their parents) made for us and never is that so clear than when working on matters such as this:
Heirs of Armenians file class-action lawsuit against German banks

ALEX VEIGA
Jaznuary 13, 1005
Associated Press

Heirs of Armenians killed 91 years ago in the Turkish Ottoman Empire sued Deutsche Bank A.G. and Dresdner Bank A.G. on Friday, claiming the German banks owe them millions of dollars and other assets deposited by their ancestors.

The class-action lawsuit was filed in Superior Court on behalf of seven Armenians living in Southern California. It is the latest bid by Armenians in the United States to recover assets they believe belonged to some 1.5 million Armenians who perished in a genocide beginning in 1915.

Litigation brought against New York Life Insurance Co. by Armenian descendants led to a $20 million settlement; French life insurer AXA has agreed to pay $17 million to settle a separate class-action claim. Both lawsuits made similar allegations.

The lawsuit against the German banks seeks to recoup unspecified millions of dollars for assets such as gold, cash and jewelry that the Armenian descendants claim were deposited by thousands of their ancestors at the banks' Turkish branches or otherwise looted by the Ottoman Turkish government and later transferred to European banks.

The banks also are accused of concealing and preventing the funds from being recovered by the account holders' heirs.

"After the genocide, you had two groups of people: You had families completely wiped out and you had families who simply escaped," said Los Angeles attorney Brian Kabateck, who also is an Armenian descendant. "Neither were able to get their assets out of the bank ... and 91 years later, we want to make it right."

A call to a Deutsche Bank spokeswoman in New York was not immediately returned Friday. Calls to European offices of Dresdner Bank rang unanswered.

Kabateck said the suit was brought in California because of the state's progressive rules governing class-action cases and statute of limitations. Southern California also is home to an estimated half-million Armenians.

Attorney Mark Geragos, who also is of Armenian descent, said there are no statute of limitations on claims to recover funds or property deposited in a bank. The attorneys compared their claim to attempts by Jewish victims of the Holocaust seeking reparations from Swiss banks.

Turkey rejects the claim there was an Armenian genocide, instead saying they were killed in civil unrest during the collapse of the empire. France, Russia and many other countries have declared the killings genocide. Turkish allies including the United States and neighboring Azerbaijan have not.

Turkey, which has no diplomatic ties with Armenia, is facing increasing international pressure to fully acknowledge the event as it seeks membership in the European Union.
The original article appears here.

-- MDT
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all content © Michael D. Thomas 2010