Sixty-three-year-old Stojan Blečić from Nikšić claims that in September of this year he was a victim of harassment by the Nikšić police. After he refused a breathalyzer test, to which he has the legal right, he was forcibly taken to the police station where, as he alleges, he fell into a sugar coma and was then robbed due to the bad treatment of the police officers. However, the case ended with the Misdemeanor Court imposing a heavy fine on him.
The police have a completely different story.
Sixty-three-year-old Stojan Blečić believes that in the last three years, traffic policemen have often punished him allegedly because of his national declaration, which culminated this September. While he was driving his wife and pregnant daughter-in-law, he was stopped by the police and then demanded to blow into the dragger, which he refused, asking instead to go for a blood test.
"They called emergency services, even though I was sitting on the sidewalk - I passively refused to cooperate with them, because they didn't want to take me to the hospital to give blood. They brought me to the station so arrogantly. Sibo, Sibin, they played something like that, as if They insulted me," says Blečić.
Blečić is disabled with both artificial legs and also diabetic, and he says that while staying at the police station he fell into a sugar coma, from which he woke up partially robbed, because only 715 euros were returned to him, while the remaining 1000, with which he intended to return the debt gone.
"When I asked where the 1.000 euros were, they started to beat me and I backed down. They took it, and they beat me more. I fell into a sugar coma, and they didn't give me a glass of water to drink the pills, but I drank them dry," Blečić points out. .
He hoped, he says, that the overall injustice that befell him would be corrected by the magistrate.
"She fined me 700 euros, because I allegedly attacked the intervention squad, me with both metal legs, 63 years old and a heavy sugar drinker, so you can imagine that terrible court. And she fined me another 200 euros for not wanting to blow into the dragger, so "divided the trial into two parts and made 60 euros for two court costs - 960 euros," Blečić said.
In the police statement delivered to the media, it is stated that Blečić behaved insolently towards the police officers on the mentioned night, but not what percentage of alcohol in his blood was recorded.
As the police officers on the spot stated, SB was visibly intoxicated, so the police officers wanted to give him a breathalyzer test, which he refused. The police officers informed this person that he would be taken to the official premises of the Nikšić Security Center for the purpose of taking further measures. After that, SB refused to get into the vehicle and sat down on the sidewalk, behaving insolently. Then he cursed and insulted the police officers and lay down on the asphalt. When it comes to the allegations that the police officers refused to give him a glass of water to drink the medicine, we inform you that these allegations are also not true because SB asked for medical help and it was given to him in the premises of CB Nikšić.
Since, as he says, his annual pension was taken away that night, Blečić filed an appeal, but it was rejected due to the delay.
He notes that he was comforted by the fact that the head of the Nikšić Security Center, Milorad Žižić, received him and referred him to the Department for Internal Control of Police Work, but he begs the ombudsman and the NGO sector to protect him and help him survive.
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