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Mourad Topalian

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Mourad Topalian (also Murad Topalian, Mourad "Moose" Topalian; Template:Lang-hy) is a prominent Armenian-American political activist, former chairman of the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), and a suspected leader of the Justice Commandos of the Armenian Genocide – a militant wing of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF).

Criminal charges: US vs. Mourad Topalian

In 2000 he pled guilty to storage of stolen explosives and owning two machine guns. Topalian received a sentence of 37 months in federal prison and three years of supervised release.

Topalian, 57 at the time, was initially charged with conspiracy, concealing and storing stolen explosives, improper storage of explosives (dangerously near a daycare center, a school and gas station), possession of machine guns and possession of firearms with defaced serial numbers. US authorities also accused him of participating in a crusade of terrorism to focus public attention on the massacre of Armenians committed by the Ottoman Empire in 1915. In the 1970s, a wave of terror fell upon Turkish officials, engineered by Armenian extremists furious over Turkish denials of the “genocide”. The attacks included 160 bombings and assassinations of 22 Turkish diplomats worldwide. The terror ebbed by the mid-1980s, but many attacks went unsolved.

Topalian was accused of plotting attacks against Turkish targets in the United States for two decades, and was suspected of links to two 1981 bombings in California, against the Orange County Convention Center in Anaheim and the Turkish consulate in Beverly Hills.

According to the indictment, Topalian recruited bombers and assassins from Armenian American youth, and provided weapons demonstrations at Armenian Youth Federation summer camps in Franklin, Massachusetts. According to federal authorities in Ohio, a prominent Armenian-American once used the camp as a training ground for attacks against the Turkish government. Mourad "Moose" Topalian showed others how to use submachine guns and built and exploded booby traps - one went off prematurely, injuring a person - in 1976 and 1977. He also sent Armenian youth to Beirut to train in weapons and explosive tactics.

Topalian was questioned about the New York bombing and denied he was a terrorist but agreed to plead guilty to storing the weapons, which were used in the Turkish Mission bombing.

Topalian also was accused of ordering a California man to bring five sticks of dynamite and blasting caps to Boston in 1982 that were to be used in a bombing in Philadelphia. FBI agents intercepted the explosives and said the suspect, Steven John Dadian, may have had ties to the Justice Commandos.

Overall, the indictment alleged that Topalian was "a part of the conspiracy that the defendant and others both known and unknown formed an 'elite group' of individuals in order to bring publicity and attention to the Armenian genocide of 1915, commonly referred to as 'the Cause,' " prosecutors said in court papers.

Between 1976 and 1996, Topalian allegedly ordered or was involved directly in bombings in New York and Anaheim and Beverly Hills, Calif., the robbery of munitions factories, and the illegal purchase of numerous high-powered weapons.

Key evidence against Topalian, came from two of his former allies.

When the federal charges were filed, Topalian resigned from his post at the ANCA, an organization with an office in Washington that serves as an advocate on Armenian issues.

Awards

In 2000, ANCA presented Mourad Topalian with the "Freedom Award" for his "dedication to advancing the Armenian cause,” and his "unique brand of leadership in driving forward and promoting Armenian history and the cause of the Armenian nation."

References

  1. FBI Publication: Terrorism 2000/2001
  2. Following Terror's Forgotten Trail US News
  3. Following Terror's Forgotten Trail US News
  4. The Boston Globe. Armenian-American site in Franklin named Camp was allegedly used for terrorist training, by John Ellement. October 16, 1999
  5. The Filthiest 48 Hours. LA Weekly
  6. The Boston Globe. Armenian-American site in Franklin named Camp was allegedly used for terrorist training, by John Ellement. October 16, 1999
  7. The Boston Globe. Armenian-American site in Franklin named Camp was allegedly used for terrorist training, by John Ellement. October 16, 1999
  8. The Boston Globe. Armenian-American site in Franklin named Camp was allegedly used for terrorist training, by John Ellement. October 16, 1999
  9. The Boston Globe. Armenian-American site in Franklin named Camp was allegedly used for terrorist training, by John Ellement. October 16, 1999
  10. The Filthiest 48 Hours. LA Weekly
  11. The Filthiest 48 Hours. LA Weekly
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