Prisoners from the Semi-Open Department of Spuška Prison announced that they will sue the Podgorica High Prosecutor's Office, because their mobile phones were allegedly illegally taken from them.
They are allowed to use mobile phones.
The searches of the rooms and confiscation of things followed the murder of Dalibor Đurić in that part of the ZIKS, and this was allegedly done on the orders of the senior state prosecutor who is in charge of the investigation.
"We understand the right of the prosecutor's office to confiscate our phones as part of the murder investigation, but not to confiscate them without any confirmation. "None of us received a confirmation of the confiscated items, it was not explained to anyone how they would compensate us for the damage, because we all had loans on those numbers," claims one of the prisoners.
He explained that the convicts in that pavilion were locked in their rooms the day after Đurić's murder and were not allowed to leave them.
"We didn't complain about it, because we knew that the investigation had to be completed smoothly. They wouldn't complain about this either if it was done legally, but it wasn't. That's why we started a strike on October 11, demanding that our phones be returned. We only went on strike for a couple of hours, because the head of the Penitentiary came to the Semi-Open Department, explained to us that the prison administration had nothing to do with confiscating phones and conveyed their position that they would order us to bring in new phones," the inmate claims.
The prisoners did not specify when they would initiate proceedings against the High Prosecutor's Office.
On September 22, Đurić was killed by a sniper shot while he was in the open gym of that part of Spuša prison. The attacker shot at him from a grove a little more than a hundred meters away.
Dejan Pavićević (44) and Miloš Trbo (30) from Kotor were arrested a few hours later.
The prosecution subsequently suspected them of providing transportation to the killer, transmitting messages and destroying traces and evidence of the liquidation of prisoners.
Đurić is the tenth victim of the Kotor mafia war, which has been raging since the end of 2014, after a shipment of 200 kilograms of cocaine was stolen in Spain. Among the dead, investigators also recorded accidental victims.
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