The resident Radomir Lalović, who has been living in Germany for years, claims that two nights ago a Croatian policeman on the way to Dubrovnik wrote him a fine of 65 euros, neither guilty nor owed.
Lalović told "Vijesta" that he did not know the reason why the policeman, who did not want to identify himself, harassed him. He said he speculated that Montenegrin license plates could be the cause.
"With my friend Dragan Pečuric, last night around 21.15:XNUMX pm we went to pick up a friend at Ćilipi airport. Not far from the school in the town of Gruda, we were stopped by a police patrol, which previously missed three cars with Croatian license plates, which overtook us on the full line," Lalović said yesterday.
He added that there were three police officers in the patrol, of whom only the younger one was correct.
Lalović speculates that Montenegrin license plates may be the cause
“The oldest policeman on the patrol was quite rude. First, he claimed that the lights on our car were not working, which was not true, and his colleague was also convinced, who said that the lights were working. The older policeman said: 'They don't work for me,' Lalović pointed out.
He didn't write a ticket for the lights though.
“He had to punish me somehow, even though I was completely correct. "He said that he would forgive me the lights, but that he had to write me a ticket for not wearing a seat belt," he said. According to Lalović, the belt was across his chest during the drive and at the beginning of the conversation.
"When I told him that it was not true that I was not wearing a seat belt, he told me that it was not properly fastened. "I wouldn't hate to go to Dubrovnik again and ask the magistrate how it can be that the seat belt is worn incorrectly," said Lalović.
He added that until now, when he went to Croatia, no one harassed him.
"I usually drove a car with German license plates to Dubrovnik. The policeman, who harassed me, did not want to say his name and surname, I only know that they are from the Gruda police department," said Lalović.
His words, he said, can be confirmed by Pečurica, as well as the police officers who were with the older colleague.
"After that event, I went to the border crossing Debeli brijeg - Karasovići, where I tried to file a report against the police officer on the Croatian side, but they chased me and my friend out of the office," Lalović pointed out.
He tried to look for help on the Montenegrin side, where he was told to contact the Croatian consulate in Kotor, and that he is not the only one who has problems when he comes from Croatia.
"At the border crossing, they told us that people from Montenegro often come to complain that they had some problem in Croatia or with the police, or that someone punctured the tires on their cars," explained Lalović.
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