Mugoša: I have nothing to do with the bombings

The man from Podgorica was questioned the day after he entered Montenegro at the Debeli Brijeg border crossing

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After the bomb attack on the Grand Cafe, Photo: Savo Prelevic
After the bomb attack on the Grand Cafe, Photo: Savo Prelevic
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

Zoran Mugoša from Podgorica said in front of the prosecutor Snežana Šišević that he had nothing to do with the bomb attacks on the Grand bar and the house of police official Duško Golubović.

Mugoša was questioned a day after he entered Montenegro at the Debeli Brijeg border crossing yesterday.

"During his return from abroad to Montenegro, at the border crossing Debeli Brijeg Mugoša was stopped, because an active warrant was issued for him due to criminal proceedings and a criminal offense committed to the detriment of the restaurant Grand and Duško Golubović started. The border policemen held a brief informational interview with him , after which he was forced to go to the Herceg Novi Security Center accompanied by the police, where he was also interviewed and given a summons to report to CB Podgorica the next day," said his lawyer Damir Lekić.

He told Vijesti that he and his client went to CB Podgorica yesterday.

"The inspectors conducted an informational interview with him, and then asked him where he was, what he was doing, whether he thought his safety was threatened and informed him to report to the prosecution, which initiated proceedings against him. This morning he reported to prosecutor Šišević, who she interrogated him as a suspect. He denied committing the crime and was released after the interrogation," said Lekić.

Mugoš, his brother Benjamin and Jovan Grujičić were suspected by the police and the prosecutor's office of two bombings. Just one day after the investigators concluded that they had shed light on the case of the bombings, information was published that Benjamin Mugoša was in prison at the time of the crimes.

Soon after, he was cleared of all suspicions. After several months in the courtroom, Grujičić was also acquitted. After the arrest of that man from Podgorica, Jovan Grujičić and his family members repeatedly denied that he participated in those crimes, explaining that he was brutally tortured in the Podgorica Security Center until a confession was forced from him.

Judge Nenad Vujanović, the News was told, after the first-instance verdict, stated that Grujičić's confession immediately after he was arrested - is not in accordance with the other evidence conducted during the trial.

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