Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07SARAJEVO500
2007-03-05 14:24:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Sarajevo
Cable title:  

BIH STATE COURT UPDATES PART TWO: TERRORISM,

Tags:  PTER KCRM KJUS KCOR KAWC PHUM PINR BK 
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 SARAJEVO 000500 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DOJ FOR OPDAT ALEXANDRE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PTER KCRM KJUS KCOR KAWC PHUM PINR BK
SUBJECT: BIH STATE COURT UPDATES PART TWO: TERRORISM,
ORGANIZED CRIME AND CORRUPTION CASES

REF: A. SARAJEVO 47

B. 06 SARAJEVO 3069

C. 06 SARAJEVO 2725

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 09 SARAJEVO 000500

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

DOJ FOR OPDAT ALEXANDRE

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PTER KCRM KJUS KCOR KAWC PHUM PINR BK
SUBJECT: BIH STATE COURT UPDATES PART TWO: TERRORISM,
ORGANIZED CRIME AND CORRUPTION CASES

REF: A. SARAJEVO 47

B. 06 SARAJEVO 3069

C. 06 SARAJEVO 2725


1. INTRODUCTION: This is the second of two cables summarizing
cases currently before the BiH State Court. This cable
summarizes organized crime, corruption and terrorism cases
underway in the BiH State Court. Cases underway in the War
Crimes Chamber were reported previously (REF. B). These
cables are intended to offer an overview of the Court and
State Prosecutor's work in order to provide context for
subsequent reporting on operational developments at the State
Court, including the phased transition from mixed
international/national to wholly national control and
staffing, and the impact of justice sector reforms. The U.S.
currently provides roughly 40 percent of all international
donor contributions to the BiH State Court, the BiH State
Prosecutor's Office, and the Registry (court administration).
END INTRODUCTION.


2. Legal and Structural Overview of the Special Department
for Organized Crime, Economic Crime and the Corruption
(hereinafter "the Special Department") and the Section for
General Crime, International Cooperation and Terrorism
(hereinafter "General Crimes Section").

a. The Special Department prosecutes crimes that are broadly
defined as connected to personal economic gain. The General
Crimes Section handles primarily administrative violations of
State law, but has one terrorism case and one treason case
underway. Both sections and the War Crimes Chamber were
created in 2003, and began trying cases in 2005. In 2006,
the Special Department opened 117 investigations, involving
222 individuals, and filed new 91 indictments against 173
individuals. At year's end there were 75 cases in some phase
of adjudication before the court.

b. Cases are heard in the first instance by a three-judge
panel, which may be composed wholly of Bosnian judges or of
Bosnian and international judges. Verdicts are reached by
consensus. In accordance with the Bosnian Criminal Procedure

Code (CPC),verdicts must be rendered orally within three
days after the prosecutor and defense deliver final
arguments, followed by a written decision within 30 days.
The court pronounces sentence at the time the verdict is
rendered. An appeal must be filed within 15 days after the
written decision is issued. Under the hybrid Common
Law/Civil Law system in Bosnia, the prosecutor may appeal an
acquittal or a low sentence. Appeals are heard by a
different three-judge panel at State Court. The appeals
panel can void the initial verdict and conduct a partial
retrial, after which the panel can consider sentencing de
novo. Decisions of the appeals panel, including fines and
sentences, are final.

c. The 2003 State Criminal Code provides for crimes such as
organized crime and human trafficking. However, under the
CPC the State Court must apply the criminal codes in effect
in the Federation and the Republika Srpska (RS) at the time
the crimes were committed. Because some of the more
sophisticated economic crimes were not recognized in these
entity codes prior to 2003, the BiH State Prosecutor is often
obliged to bring lesser charges, which carry lower penalties.
Terrorism has been a state crime since 1951. Crimes against
the State are considered violations of the Dayton
Constitution.


3. Summary of Cases in the State Court General Crime Section

a. BEKTASEVIC, Mirsad et al

Defendants:

BEKTASEVIC, Mirsad (aka Maximus; DPOB: 30 July 1987, Butmir,
Ilidza, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
CESUR, Abdulkadir (aka Turkee; DPOB: 27 November 1985,
Frederiksburgu, Denmark)
IKANOVIC, Bajro (DPOB: 8 November 1976, Hrnjicici, Bratunac,
Bosnia and Herzegovina)

SARAJEVO 00000500 002 OF 009


BAJRIC, Amir (aka Cami; DPOB: 26 February, 1978, Sarajevo,
Bosnia and Herzegovina)
HASANOVIC, Senad (aka Senci; DPOB: 2 May 1986, Sarajevo,
Bosnia and Herzegovina)

Charges:

-- Terrorism (Bektasevic, Cesur, Ikanovic)
-- Obstruction of Justice (Bektasevic, Cesur)
-- Illegal Possession of Weapons or Explosive Substances
(Bajric, Hasanovic)

According to the indictment, when defendants Bektasevic and
Cesur were arrested they had in their possession weapons,
explosives, a crudely fashioned suicide belt, and a video
depicting masked men supposedly preparing to attack
unspecified European targets. The accused supposedly planned
to use these items against nations with troops in Iraq or
Afghanistan. Bajric and Hasanovic were arrested for
allegedly selling the explosives. Ikanovic was accused of
being the go-between who procured the explosives from Bajric
and Hasanovic on behalf of Bektasevic and Cesur. The
defendants were arrested in October-November 2005.

Before the trial began, Bajric negotiated a plea agreement
with the prosecutor to receive a two-year sentence in
exchange for testifying against the others. On January 10,
2007, the BiH State Court found the defendants guilty on all
charges, and sentenced them to prison terms: Bektasevic - 15
years; Cesur - 13 years; Ikanovic - 8 years; and Hasanovic
2.5 years. Although Bajric and Hasanovic were convicted of
the same crime, the Court decided that Hasanovic's
non-cooperation merited a (slightly) higher sentence. (REF.
A.) The case is now on appeal.

b. JELAVIC, Ante et al

Defendants:

PRCE, Miroslav (DPOB: 29 May 1953, Crnici, Stolac, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
JELAVIC, Ante (DPOB: 21 August 1963, Potprolog, Vrgorac,
Croatia)
CURCIC, Dragan (DPOB: 1 September 1965, Pervan, Zenica,
Bosnia and Herzegovina)

Charges: Undermining the Military and Defensive Power of the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina; Abuse of Office or
Official Authority (NOTE: The charge of Endangering the
Territorial Integrity of BiH did not exist at the time in
question. END NOTE.)

This case is informally referred to as the "Third Entity" or
the "Croat Self-Rule" case. The indictment alleges that on
28 October 2000, the Croat National Assembly (HNS) was
established as the "permanent and highest political
institution of the Croat people in Bosnia and Herzegovina."
Jelavic, a member of the BiH Tri-Presidency at the time, was
elected HNS Chairman. In March 2001, the HNS passed the
"Decision Establishing the Inter-Cantional/Inter-Municipal
Council as a Form of Croat Self-Rule in Bosnia and
Herzegovina." This decision posited that the BiH and FBiH
authorities would not be acknowledged on the territory under
Croat self-rule, because the BiH and FBiH authorities were
"contrary to the will of the Croat people."

Prce, then FBiH Defense Minister, and Curcic, then FBiH Army
Deputy Commander, allegedly attempted to place ethnic Croat
defense forces outside the jurisdiction of the FBiH Ministry
of Defense. In October 2005, the Court sentenced Jelavic to
ten years in prison, but he fled to Croatia and remains a
fugitive. The Court sentenced Prce to six years imprisonment
for abusing his office and undermining the FBiH military.
Curcic was acquitted on all counts. In July 2006, the
appeals panel overturned Prce's conviction for abuse of
office, but upheld the remainder of the first instance
verdict and reaffirmed the six year sentence.


4. Summary of Cases in the State Court Special Department for

SARAJEVO 00000500 003 OF 009


Organized Crime, Economic Crime and Corruption

a. ANTONIC, Milos (DPOB: 14 August 1960, Trbusnica, Loznica,
Serbia and Montenegro)

Charges: Abuse of Office or Official Authority; Forging
Official Documents; Money Laundering; Tax Evasion

Antonic was accused of committing specific acts of forgery,
tax evasion and money laundering while he was owner and
director of the "Antony Company" from February to September,

1995. These acts allegedly included preparing blank
purchasing orders for collaborators smuggling goods, and
completed purchase orders that grossly understated the value
of goods bought or overstated the value of good sold, as part
of the money laundering scheme. He was accused of performing
these acts for personal gain as well as in furtherance of an
ongoing, multi-party criminal enterprise. Antonic has been
in custody since September 2005. In March 2006, the Court
sentenced him to five years in prison. The appellate panel
upheld the sentence in May 2006. Antonic has exhausted his
appeals and the verdict is final.

b. BULATOVIC, Zoran

Charge: Money Laundering

The indictment alleges that in April 2005 BULATOVIC
registered the Ferocom d.o.o. Laktasi Company. BULATOVIC is
accused of making available to other companies certified
blank order forms, tax exemption statements, invoices, bills
of ladling and other Laktasi Company documents. BULATOVIC
allegedly took money in cash, deposited it in the Laktasi
Company account, and then transferred it to the other
companies in phantom business transactions. The indictment
was confirmed in November 2006 and the case is in pretrial.

c. COVIC, Dragan et al

Defendants:

COVIC, Dragan (DPOB: 20 August 1956, Mostar, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
TADIC, Mato (DPOB: 15 August 1952, Brcko District, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
IKANOVIC-LIJANOVIC, Jozo (DPOB: 29 November 1962, Siroki
Brijeg, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
IKANOVIC-LIJANOVIC, Mladen (DPOB: 22 August 1960, Siroki
Brijeg, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
IKANOVIC-LIJANOVIC, Jerko (DPOB: 15 November 1969, Siroki
Brijeg, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
IKANOVIC-LIJANOVIC, Slavo (DPOB: 30 November 1957, Siroki
Brijeg, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
LUCIC, Zdravko (DPOB: 14 February 1957, Zivinic, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)

Charges:

-- Criminal Conspiracy; Organized Crime; Associating for
Criminal Purposes (Ivankovic-Lijanovic brothers, Lucic, Covic)
-- Abuse of Office or Official Authority; Dereliction of
Duty; Accomplice to Bribery (Covic)
-- Bribery (Ivankovic-Lijanovic brothers, Lucic)
-- Forgery; Abuse of Position of Economic Power; Tax Evasion
(Ivankovic-Lijanovic brothers)
-- Abuse of Office or Official Authority; Accepting Bribes
(Tadic)
-- Obstruction of Justice (Jozo Ivankovic-Lijanovic)

Dragan Covic, formerly a member of the BiH Tri-Presidency and
currently leader of the Croatian Democratic Union for BiH
(HDZ-BiH),was Federation Finance Minister from December 1998
to March 2001. He was accused of accepting bribes during
that time from the Ivankovic-Lijanovic brothers in exchange
for directing the FBiH Customs Administration to exempt the
Ivankovic-Lijanovic companies from import taxes and levies on
chicken products. He also allegedly obstructed Federation
and BiH State officials' efforts to collect taxes from the
co-defendants' poultry companies. Tadic, former President

SARAJEVO 00000500 004 OF 009


and current member of the BiH Constitutional Court, was
accused of accepting a bribe, conveyed via co-defendant
Lucic, to rule in favor of the brothers in the 2004 tax
evasion civil suit.

Defendants were not held in custody during the trial. On 17
November 2006, the Court found Covic guilty of Abuse of
Office and sentenced him to five years. The other charges
against him were dismissed. The co-defendants were acquitted
on all counts. After denying his initial request, on
December 14 the Court granted Covic's release pending the
appeal, after ordering him to surrender all Bosnian and
Croatian travel documents and post over USD 2 million in
bail. Covic is also required to report to the Mostar
municipal police station once a week.

d. COVIC, Husmir

Charges: Human Trafficking; Associating for Criminal Purposes

The indictment alleges that Covic, as a member of an
organized crime group, participated in attempting to smuggle
people across the BiH-Croatia border. The main trial, which
began in September 2006, is currently underway.

e. CULINA, Ivan and CULJAK, Ivica (DPOB: unavailable)

Charges: Money Laundering; Tax Evasion

Culina and Culjak pled guilty in July 2006 and were sentenced
to time served and fined approximately USD 4,000 each.

f. DIZDAREVIC, Aziz et al

Defendants:

DIZDAREVIC, Aziz (DPOB: unavailable)
HASIC, Begajet (DPOB: unavailable)
JOVICIC, Dragutin (DPOB: unavailable)
TURSUNOVIC, Mevludin (DPOB: unavailable)

Charges: Trafficking in Persons (Dizdarevic, Jovicic,
Tursunovic); Extortion (Hasic)

In December 2006, the accused pled not guilty to running a
human trafficking operation. They were accused of smuggling a
group of 12 Chinese citizens through Sarajevo airport and
then overland to Croatia, Italy and France in April-May 2005.
The trial began January 9, 2007. On February 21 the Court
granted Dizdarevic's request for bail, deciding that his
detention was no longer necessary to prevent him from
influencing witnesses. The other defendants were already at
liberty pending the verdict.

g. DUSANIC, Petar

Co-Defendant: DUSANIC, Mira

Charges: Tax Evasion (Petar Dusanic); Customs Fraud (Mira
Dusanic)

As the co-directors of Kompanija Dusanic, Petar and Mira
Dusanic were indicted for evading tax and customs obligations
under RS law by falsifying sales receipts to grossly
underrepresented transaction costs during the period
2002-2003. In October 2006, the couple pled guilty. Petar
was sentenced to six months in prison and Mira received a
suspended sentence of one year, with three years probation.
The couple were ordered to pay all back taxes and customs
duties, amounting to approximately USD 577,000.

h. DUSHI, Leonard (DPOB: 27 May 1972, Shkoder, Albania)

Co-Defendant:

ISENI, Eljmi (DPOB: 12 November 1970, Kumanovio, Macedonia)

Charges:


SARAJEVO 00000500 005 OF 009


-- Human Trafficking (Dushi, Iseni)
-- Organized Crime; Forgery; Aggravated Theft (Dushi)

Dushi is charged with specific incidents of illegally
trafficking persons from Albania to Italy, via Montenegro and
Bosnia, between November 2004 and September 2005. Iseni is
accused of being Dushi's driver and assistant. Dushi is also
accused of using a forged passport to purchase an apartment
in Sarajevo, which served as a weigh-station for victims.
Dushi was arrested in September 2005. On 31 October, the
Court found Dushi guilty on all counts, and sentenced him to
five years in prison. Iseni was convicted of being an
accessory to human trafficking, and given a 10-month
suspended sentence and two years' probation. On February 6
the Appellate Court reduced Dushi's sentence to three years.

i. FAZLIC, Asim

Co-Defendant:

KOBILIC, Senad

Charges:

-- Fraud; Attempted Blackmail

Fazlic was charged with accepting bribes to tip off suspects
while he was Deputy Director of BiH Interpol in 2003.
Kobilic was accused of acting as intermediary. In June 2005,
Fazlic was acquitted and Kobilic was sentenced to one year
imprisonment. The prosecution and the defense appealed. In
December 2005, the Appellate Panel confirmed Fazlic's
acquittal. It also overturned Kobilic's conviction and
ordered a partial retrial. In November 2006, Kobilic pled
guilty to attempted fraud and received a nine month suspended
prison sentence, with 18 months probation. The case is now
concluded.

j. IBRAHIMOVIC, Enver (DPOB: 29 January 1982, Novi Pazar,
Serbia and Montenegro)

Co-Defendant:

DANCETOVIC, Dojcin (DPOB: 2 March 1985, Kosovska Mitrovica,
Serbia and Montenegro)

Charge: Money Laundering

Dancetovic was the owner and operator of the Uspjeh-Prom
d.o.o. Sarajevo Company. Ibrahimovic and he are accused of
selling goods for cash, and then falsifying sales receipts to
grossly underrepresent transaction costs to evade tax
obligations. They are further accused of hiding the money
from tax authorities by depositing it in accounts they
created with different banks in Sarajevo. During the
pretrial phase, Dancetovic pled guilty in exchange for
receiving a two year prison sentence. The case against
Ibrahimovic went to trial in November 2005. In February
2006, the Court found him guilty and sentenced him to two
years imprisonment. The appellate panel upheld the sentence
in April. Ibrahimovic has exhausted his appeals and the
verdict is final.

k. KARIC, Sedinet et al

Defendants:

KARIC, Sedinet
KARIC, Senida
JAHIC, Besim
ZUKIC, Novalija
ZAHIROVIC, Amira
MALINIC, Eldar
SLKIC, Mehmed

Charges:

-- Tax Evasion (Sedinet Karic, Senida Karic, Jahic, Zukic,
Zahirovic, Malinic, Salkic)

SARAJEVO 00000500 006 OF 009


-- Money Laundering (Sedinet Karic, Senida Karic, Jahic,
Zukic, Zahirovic, Malinic)
-- Illegal Weapons Possession (Sedinet Karic, Senida Karic)

Defendants were found guilty in June 2006 of all counts in a
textile manufacture and trading scheme and fined Sedinet and
Sedina Karic USD 934,000.00. The Court also sentenced
Sedinet Karic to 2 years, Sedina Karic, Jahic, Zukic,
Zahirovic and Malinic to 1.5 years, and Salkic to one year in
prison. All sentences were suspended and defendants granted
probation. In December an appeals panel upheld the
Prosecutor's appeal for higher sentences, and ordered a
retrial.

l. KUCEVIC, Tasim et al

Defendants:

KUCEVIC, Tasim (DPOB: 16 September 1961, Zabren, Sjenica,
Serbia and Montenegro)
PJEVIC, Meliha (DPOB: 4 June 1976, Pasci, Tuzla, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
SPAHIC, Enver (DPOB: 1 January 1973, Barice, Zivinice, Bosnia
and Herzegovina)
TRBARA, Zoran (DPOB: 2 July 1969, Tuzla, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
FAZLIC, Admir (DPOB: 27 June 1964, Zagreb, Croatia)
DULOVIC, Mirzet (DPOB: 2 December 1982, Tuzla, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
DULOVIC, Nedzad (DPOB: 25 June 1975, Barice, Zivinice, Bosnia
and Herzegovina)
SABIC, Almir (DPOB: 20 October 1981, Tuzla, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
MUJKIC, Mirsad (DPOB: 30 September 1968, Dugi Do, Zvornik,
Bosnia and Herzegovina)
GUSINAC, Edzevit (DPOB: 19 February 1985, Tutin, Serbia and
Montenegro)

Charges:

-- Organized Crime; Human Trafficking; Pandering (Kucevic,
Pjevic, Spahic, Trbara, Fazlic, Mirzet Dulovic, Nedzad
Dulovic, Sabic, Mujkic, Glusinac)
-- Tax Evasion; Money Laundering (Kucevic, Pjevic)

Kucevic and Pjevic are accused of running a prostitution
operation in their jointly-owned Hotel "Mlin" in Ljubace.
The other co-defendants were lessees, managers and staff of
the hotel. Kucevic and Pjevic allegedly coerced women who
were already trafficking victims under their control to help
recruit other women from foreign countries. The women were
promised asylum and/or employment in Bosnia, and then abused
and sexually exploited once they arrived. Kucevic and Pjevic
are also charged with failing to pay taxes on the portion of
income earned from operating the Hotel "Mlin" as a legitimate
business (less than one third the amount earned illegally).
Kucevic has been in custody since February 2006. The other
defendants are out on bail. On January 29, 2007, the Court
released Kucevic on bail, and prohibited him from engaging in
any business activity related to his hotel business. The
trial, which began in June 2006, is ongoing.

m. KULIC, Damir (DPOB: unavailable)

Charge: Money Laundering

In November 2006, Kulic pled guilty to laundering money
through his firm, the Uzor Group d.o.o. Trn-Laktasi Company.
The scheme involved selling goods for cash, and then
falsifying sales receipts to grossly underrepresented
transaction costs to evade tax obligations. Kulic was
sentenced to three years in prison, and fined approximately
USD 60,000. The court ruled that his time in custody (12
months) counted towards his sentence.

n. MANDIC, Momcilo et al

Defendants:


SARAJEVO 00000500 007 OF 009


MANDIC, Momcilo (DPOB: 1 May 1954, Kalinovik, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
BJELICA, Milovan (DPOB: 19 October 1958, Rogatica, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
GOVEDARICA, Milorad (DPOB: 2 January 1955, Vitina Ljubuski,
Bosnia and Herzegovina)
SAROVIC, Mirko (DPOB: 16 September 1956, Rogatica, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)

Charges:

-- Abuse of Office or Official Authority; Associating for
Criminal Purposes; Organized Crime (Mandic, Bjelica,
Govedarica, Sarovic)
-- Forgery; Providing Assistance to Persons Indicted Before
The ICTY (Mandic)

This case is related to the Sarovic case (para. 4r). Mandic,
former Serb Republic Minister of Justice and Director of
Privredna Banka Srpska Sarajevo, was accused of repeatedly
violating RS banking laws between October 1998 and August

2002. The indictment alleged that Mandic dispensed unsecured
loans to dummy corporations set up by Bjelica and Govedarica,
with Sarovic's help, and illegally transferred depositors'
funds to political party accounts. Privredna Banka went
bankrupt as a direct result of these actions.

The defendants were taken into custody at different times
between August and December 2005. On October 27, 2006, the
Court sentenced Mandic to nine years in prison for abuse of
office and forgery. However, the Court ruled that it could
not find him guilty of providing assistance to PIFWCs,
because no relevant law existed in the RS during the
time-frame being considered. Co-defendant Govedarica was
given four years for abuse of office. Sarovic, a former BiH
Tri-Presidency member and high-ranking SDS official, and
Bjelica were acquitted. Mandic and Govedarica were also
ordered to pay damages to Privredna Banka totaling over KM
4.5 million (approximately USD 3 million). The State
Prosecutor intends to appeal the acquittals. In a separate
case now getting underway, Mandic faces war crimes charges
stemming from his actions as Justice Minister in the
so-called Serb Republic during the war (REF. C).

o. OKIC, Ferid and VASI, Fevzi (DPOB: unavailable)

Charge: Organized Crime

The accused and five others were indicted in November 2004.
The five co-defendants concluded plea agreements during the
course of the trial, but Okic and Vasi continued to maintain
their innocence. In November 2005, Okic and Vasi were found
guilty of organized crime activities, including illicit
narcotics trafficking, kidnapping, robbery and illegal
possession of weapons and explosives. Okic was initially
sentenced to 22.3 years imprisonment, while Vasi received 2
months. In May 2006 the appellate panel overturned the
verdicts and ordered a retrial. On February 12, 2007, the
second trial panel upheld the guilty verdict and increased
the sentences. Okic received 24 years and Vasi's sentence was
upped to one year in jail.

p. PAPIC, Milan et al

Defendants:

JOVANOVIC, Milan
JOVIC, Andelko
MAJDOV, Dragomir
NOVAKOVIC, Goran
OBRENOVIC, Miljana
PAPIC, Milan
SARIC, Dragan
SIMIC, Davor

Charges: Organized Crime; Forgery; Tax Evasion

The indictment alleges, inter alia, that between September
2005 and March 2006 Papic ran a illegal coffee import

SARAJEVO 00000500 008 OF 009


operation. Acting as executive director of the firm Red Star
d.o.o. Bileca and Pami Trade d.o.o. Niksic, Montenegro, Papic
concluded a contract with "STR INC" Inman-SC-USA to import
raw coffee. Saric allegedly transported the coffee by truck
from a port in Slovenia. Novakovic, Obrenovic, Jovic and
Simic were State Customs officers who, on various occasions,
registered the truck as empty when it crossed the border.
State Border Service officer Majdov was also involved in the
scheme. Jovanovic, another State Customs official, is
accused of destroying documents in order to help Papic avoid
paying proper import duties. The indictment was confirmed in
September 2006, and the trial began in November 2006.

q. POLJO, Zijad et al

Defendants:

POLJO, Zijad (DPOB: 3 January 1966, Rajevo Selo, Croatia)
CATO, Halil (aka Dilas; DPOB: 22 March 1951, Vinkovci,
Croatia)
SABANOVIC, Zemina (aka Minka; DPOB: 23 August 1960, Gunja,
Croatia)
MAGLIC, Samir (DPOB: 28 December 1973, Travnik, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
HABIBOVIC, Alen (DPOB: 6 May 1976, Kladanj, Bosnia and
Herzegovina)
VASIC, Bogdan (DPOB: 19 October 1963, Belgrade, Serbia and
Montenegro)
KALENDER, Dragoljub (DPOB: 17 August 1956, Sovijak, Bosanska
Gradiska, Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Legal Entities: Poljo Oil; Fenkis Komerc; Delta; Alfa RS;
Interspeed; Trade Komerc

Charges:

-- Money Laundering; Associating for Criminal Purposes
(Sabanovic, Maglic, Habibovic, Vasic, Kalendar, Poljo, Cato)
-- Tax Evasion (Poljo, Cato)

According to the indictment, Poljo and his co-defendants
undertook a criminal conspiracy to avoid tax obligations by
manipulating petrol and petrol product sales transactions.
Between January and October 2003, Poljo and the others
allegedly produced invoices falsely documenting Poljo Oil
sales to several dummy companies. At the same time, the
defendants also sold petrol and petrol products for cash to
legitimate businesses, and later doctored the receipts to
underreport their profit margin. In June 2006, Vasic and
Sabanovic negotiated plea agreements with the Prosecutor's
Office. Vasic received a six and one-half year sentence for
money laundering and associating for criminal purposes.
Sabanovic received six months in jail for money laundering
and was fined 20,000 KM (approximately USD 15,000 for
associating for criminal purposes. The trial of Poljo and
the remaining co-defendants has been underway since March

2006.

r. SAROVIC, Mirko (DPOB: 16 September 1956, Rogatica, Bosnia
and Herzegovina)

Co-defendant: DESPOTOVIC, Milan (DPOB: unavailable)

Charges: Incitement to Perjury (Sarovic); Perjury (Despotovic)

The indictment alleges that Sarovic, while in custody in
Doboj District Prison, instructed Doboj District Prison guard
Despotovic to conceal evidence and give false statements to
court related to the Mandic case (para. 4n). The case is in
pre-trial.

s. SUBASIC, Admir

Co-Defendant

Memsudin Cengic

Charges: Human Trafficking; Associating for Criminal Purposes

According to the indictment the accused attempted to smuggle

SARAJEVO 00000500 009 OF 009


four people from Montenegro to Western Europe, through
Bosnia, in October 2005. The indictment was confirmed in
July 2006, and the men accepted a plea bargain in September.
Subasic received a 14-month suspended sentence, and Cengic
was sent to prison for nine months.

t. TANOVIC, Jovo, DRAGOLJUB, Serif and TEROVIC, Haris (DPOB:
unavailable)

Charges: Trafficking in Persons, Associating for Criminal
Purposes

The accused pled guilty in August 2006. Tanovic received a
three year suspended sentence, with five years' probation.
Terovic and Dragoljub each received 8-month suspended
sentences with three years' probation.

u. TASOVAC, Zeljko et al

Defendants

ATELJEVIC, Miodrag
POPOVAC, Slobodan
RADIC, Drazen
SARABA, Nikola
TASOVIC, Nada
TASOVAC, Zeljko
VUKOJE, Nebojsa

Charges:

-- Attempted Murder, Organized Crime, Illegal Weapons
Possession, Obstruction of Justice (Aletjevic, Popovac,
Radic, Saraba, Tasovic, Tasovac, Vukoje)
-- Assault (Vukoje)

The indictment, confirmed in September 2006, alleges that
Tasovac led an organized crime group, in which his
co-defendants were members. The group is accused of
attempting to plant an explosive device in front of the
house of a potential witness in criminal proceedings against
Tasovac. Popovac and Nada Tasovac are also accused of paying
an unidentified person to intimidate another witness. The
trial began in January 2007.

v. TUZLAK, Kenan and Mehmed (DPOB: unavailable)

Charges: Money Laundering

Mehmed Tuzlak and his son Kenan were indicted in April 2006
and pled guilty in June to registering a dummy company "Codex
Line" in Zenica through which to launder money. Mehmed
Tuzlak was sentenced to 18 months in prison, and Kenan Tuzlak
received a eight month suspended sentence, with three years'
probation.
MCELHANEY