Kožar and Hadžić killed with two weapons

Inspectors from Athens are checking whether the murders of Kožar and Hadžić are connected with the liquidation of one of the leaders of the Skaljars - Igor Dedović and one of the heads of the Podgorica branch of that clan, Stevan Stamatović, in January, in the Athens district of Vari

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Investigation after the murder of Kožar and Hadžić, Photo: Corfupress
Investigation after the murder of Kožar and Hadžić, Photo: Corfupress
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

The executioners shot Alan Kožar (43) from Baranin and Damir Hadžić (46) from Užičanin with two weapons - caliber 7,65 and 9 millimeters, the inspectors of the Corfu Department for Crimes Against Life determined.

This information was published by the Greek Skai yesterday, citing police information.

The police are allegedly looking for the two executors, as well as their possible helpers, who followed the two scumbags to the house in front of which they were killed.

The first information about the murder of two high-ranking members of the Skaljar clan appeared on Thursday, July 23, around 17 pm local time.

Whether that is the actual time of liquidation - will be shown by the autopsy, which will also determine how many shots they were hit with.

A day after the double murder in the parking lot of a rented villa in Halikouni, forensic scientist Gianis Aivatidis, who was at the scene of the crime, told local radio that they had been hit with 29 shots, mostly in the head and chest.

Although the identity of those killed has not yet been officially confirmed, the Greek media announced yesterday that the two scoundrels were liquidated in the continuation of the Montenegrin clan war.

Corfupress reports that the victims found in Corfu were killed in the most brutal way.

photo: Corfupress

"There were no eyewitnesses, and the message of the Kavački clan to the Skaljars became even clearer," reports that portal.

Although immediately after the liquidation in Greece it was unofficially said that one more person was wounded, this has not yet been officially confirmed.

The day after the murder, the Greek police were looking for a friend of Baranin and Užičanin, who rented the villa for them.

In that house, which was searched after the murder, the police found a gun, several pieces of ammunition and 11.500 euros.

A Glock pistol was also found in the car in which the inspectors found the dismembered bodies of Kožar and Hadžić.

The Slovenian passports they had with them were found to be forged. The executioners Kožar and Hadžić most likely followed the victims for days.

The data of the investigation so far, published by the local media, show that the perpetrators of the double murder knew in detail the habits and movements of the "two Balkans".

Alan Kozar (archive)
Alan Kozar (archive)photo: Savo Prelevic

Three days ago, they were ambushed in front of the entrance to the garage.

Based on the traces found in the car, the investigators determined that they were on the beach before the murder.

They probably didn't have time to use the weapons they had in the car and fire back. However, this too will be determined by expert examination.

Inspectors from Athens are checking whether the murders of Kožar and Hadžić are connected with the liquidation of one of the leaders of the Skaljars - Igor Dedović and one of the heads of the Podgorica branch of that clan, Stevan Stamatović, in January, in the Athens district of Vari.

Even yesterday, the Montenegrin police did not inform the public whether their colleagues from Greece had officially informed them about the murder of Baranin, who was wanted with an international warrant.

Unofficially, immediately after the information was received from Greece about the liquidation of the skalars, the top of the Montenegrin police told "Vijesta" that they believed that Baranin and Užičanin were killed in the continuation of the Montenegrin clan war that has been raging for years.

More than 40 people were killed in that war.

Kožar had been on the run for years, and the Special State Prosecutor's Office suspected him of forming a criminal group in 2016, whose members he ordered to kill Slobodan Šaranović, a citizen of Danilovgrad.

Užičanin was wanted by the Serbian judicial authorities, who suspect that he participated in the liquidation of Davorin Baltić, a high-ranking member of the Kavača criminal clan, on January 1, 2018, in Belgrade.

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