San Francisco Chronicle

FBI investigat­ing arson fire at Armenian church

- By Nora Mishanec Nora Mishanec is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: nora. mishanec@ sfchronicl­e. com Twitter: @ NMishanec

The FBI has joined the San Francisco police investigat­ion into an arson fire that engulfed an Armenian cultural center in September, one of a spate of apparent hate crimes targeting San Francisco’s Armenian community, officials announced Thursday.

Federal investigat­ors offered a $ 50,000 reward for informatio­n that leads to the arrest and conviction of those responsibl­e for the fire that ripped through the building adjacent to the St. Gregory Armenian Apostolic Church in Presidio Heights on Sept. 17. The arson leveled Sunday school classrooms, a library, meeting rooms and church offices as flames tore through the building before dawn.

“This act of violence was not just an attack on a building, but on a congregati­on,” FBI investigat­or Craig Fair said in a statement announcing federal involvemen­t in the probe.

The San Francisco Police Department’s arson task force deemed the fire a hate crime, one of several attacks on the city’s Armenian community over two months. The other hate crimes were tied to the KZV Armenian School in the Parkmerced neighborho­od, where police investigat­ed hateful graffiti and bullet damage.

Police have not arrested any suspects, and FBI officials said they do not yet know whether the incidents are connected.

In addition to the FBI reward, the Armenian Cultural Foundation is offering $ 25,000 to anyone with informatio­n that leads to an arrest and conviction. The foundation represents thousands of Armenian people in the Bay Area, many of whom said the San Francisco fire was emblematic of a larger intimidati­on effort.

“It is a tragic situation that we still find ourselves faced with such a threatenin­g and violent level of hate,” said Edith Khachatour­ian, a parishoner at St. Gregory, where the fire destroyed the interiors of the first floor and basement of the adjacent building. No one was inside.

The attacks appeared to be part of a larger pattern of hate crimes around the world against members of the Armenian diaspora in the leadup to the sixweek war in the Caucasus region known as NagornoKar­abakh or Artsakh.

St. Gregory’s has long served as a refuge for the descendant­s of those who fled persecutio­n after the Armenian genocide more than 100 years ago, Khachatour­ian said.

 ?? Nora Mishanec / The Chronicle ?? The FBI is offering a reward in its probe of the Sept. 17 fire at St. Gregory Armenian Apostolic Church in San Francisco.
Nora Mishanec / The Chronicle The FBI is offering a reward in its probe of the Sept. 17 fire at St. Gregory Armenian Apostolic Church in San Francisco.

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