If the MPs in the Parliament of Montenegro adopt the Draft Law on Amnesty, which also includes the perpetrators of serious murders, the sentence for only a few prisoners would be reduced by around 35 years of imprisonment.
The final convictions of Igor Raičević, Damir Mandić, Ivan Vračar, Goran Babić, Ferid Kuč, Darko Vlahović, Sava Međedović, Marko Mašanović and Milan Grbavčević are just some of those convicted of aggravated murder, who, if the proposal is accepted, will serve a fifth less sentence than the one they were sentenced to.
The one who would benefit the most from the state's mercy would be Raičević, whose maximum sentence of 2013 years in prison was confirmed by the Court of Appeals of Montenegro in June 40.
Raičević was convicted of the murder of his wife Marija and her friend Ivan Dulović. If MPs adopt the proposal approved by the Government two days ago, he will spend eight years less behind the walls of Skopje.
Mandić, the only person convicted by a final verdict for the murder of "Dan" editor Duško Jovanović, will also feel the mercy of the state. The Court of Appeals overturned his first-instance verdict and sentenced him to 18 years in prison for complicity in the murder of Jovanović and the attempted murder of his bodyguard Milorad Mirović.
Damir Mandic
The court took into account the earlier final judgment of Damir Mandić, who was sentenced to two years in prison for the kidnapping of Miodrag Nikolić from Cetinje, and sentenced him to a single sentence of 19 years in prison.
The Court of Appeals has already "removed" 11 years of his sentence, when it overturned the first-instance verdict of former judge Lazar Aković. If the amendments are accepted, Mandić's sentence will be reduced by three years and nine months.
The sentence of Ivan Vračar, the killer of Kotor businessman Dragan Dudić Fric, a resident of Nikšić, would be reduced by three years and three months. Last month, the Court of Appeals upheld his first-instance verdict, which sentenced him to 17 years and three months in prison for the murder of Dudić and the wounding of his friend Željko Bojanić.
Arrest of Goran Babić
If the MPs adopt the Amnesty Proposal, Danilovgrad resident Goran Babić, who was sentenced to 18 years in prison by the Court of Appeal for the murder of sixteen-year-old NS, will spend almost four years less in the Criminal Sanctions Enforcement Institution.
Ferid Kuč, from Podgorica, who killed his fourteen-year-old daughter in 2006 with a steel chisel used to drill holes in rocks, will remain behind bars for 30 years instead of 24.
The brutal killer from Bar, Darko Vlahović, will spend four years less in the Supca prison, if the government's proposal is adopted. He was sentenced to 2013 years in prison by a final verdict of the Court of Appeal in April 20 for the murder of Miloš Penda from Trebinje.
Darko Vlahovic
Vlahović was convicted of brutally and selfishly killing Penda with a screwdriver on June 22, 2009, at around 13.30:XNUMX p.m. in Bar.
Baran's Vasilije Marković, who at the end of August 2005, in the Sutorman resort near Bar, killed and set fire to his aunt's brother Igor Šljivančanin, could serve three years less
The sentence of Milan Grbavčević from Mataguž will also be reduced by three years and six months for the murder of Vladimir Ajković and the attempted murder of Igor Krstović. Grbavčević was sentenced to 18 years in prison because, according to the verdict, he killed Ajković and intentionally attempted to kill Krstović in Golubovci on March 21, 2006.
Sava Međedović from Nikšić, who was sentenced to 15 years in prison, will apparently spend three years less in ZIKS. According to the indictment, on October 5, 2005, he intentionally, for selfish reasons and in a treacherous manner, killed seventy-year-old MJ.
Marko Mašanović from Cetinje, who was sentenced to 14 years in prison for the murder of his uncle Mirko Uskoković, will have his sentence reduced by two years and eight months.
According to the indictment, on April 27, 2005, he intentionally killed his uncle out of reckless revenge.
Baran's Vasilije Marković, who at the end of August 2005, in the Sutorman resort near Bar, killed and set fire to his aunt's brother Igor Šljivančanin, could serve three years less. He was sentenced to 30 years in the first instance, but later the Supreme Court reduced the sentence to 18 years in prison.
There is no mercy for Šćekić's killers
The perpetrators and organizers of the murder of police officer Slavoljub Šćekić - Milan Čila Šćekić, Ljubo Vujadinović, Saša Boreta and Ljubo Bigović, who were sentenced to a total of 120 years in prison, will be deprived of the mercy of the state.
Saša Boreta
They will not be included in these government amendments, if adopted, because their verdict is not yet final. The Court of Appeals upheld the verdict against Čilo Šćekić, who is accused of killing Inspector Šćekić with a heckler on August 30, 2005, and Vujadinović, who was waiting for him in a jeep after the burst.
They were sentenced to 30 years in prison each. Boreta and Bigović received the same sentence, for inciting the murder and attempted racketeering of the co-owner of the Splendid Hotel, Žarko Radulović.
Pištinjat is six years younger
One of the most monstrous crimes in modern Montenegro took place on the night between January 2 and 3, 2005, when Željko V. Pištinjat (36) from Zelenika killed a married couple in that place near Herceg Novi, Nikola and Marija Raša.
Željko Pištinjat
Pištinjat was sentenced to 30 years in prison for that crime, and if the amendments are accepted, his prison term will be reduced by even six years.
He was convicted of killing his spouses in a brutal manner by hitting them on the head with an ax.
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