from Budva Ivan Delic He had to tell prosecutors about what he wrote to a police officer via a once encrypted app. Petar Lazovic - who killed Baranin Armin Musa Osmanagić.
The Higher State Prosecutor's Office confirmed to "Vijesti" that they had questioned the detained Budva resident in that investigation, but they did not specify whether he confirmed his allegations from February 2021.
Delić was summoned for questioning after "Vijesti" reported that former police officer Lazović did not share with the prosecution information about Osmanagić's killer, which Delić had given him more than four and a half years ago.
"In the Higher State Prosecutor's Office in Podgorica, in the case established regarding the murder of AM, the person ID was heard as a witness, and in order to protect the interests of the criminal proceedings, it is not possible to provide more information regarding your questions, and in the further course of the proceedings, other actions will be taken that the prosecutor's office deems necessary for making a decision in the case," the High State Prosecutor's Office in Podgorica responded to "Vijesti" yesterday.
According to unofficial information from the newspaper, Delić was taken from the Remand Prison to the premises of the Podgorica Higher Prosecutor's Office in the middle of last week.
"Vijesti" has no information on whether he repeated to the prosecutor that he killed Osmanagić. RT
Osmanagić was killed on September 16, 2014 in Bar.
He was hit by a bullet from a sniper rifle as he entered the garden of his restaurant "Savoja".
According to the investigation at the time, the bullet, which passed through his body, then lodged itself in the hand of the restaurant waiter. Zoran Macavara.
Although the competent prosecutors and police have been fumbling around for 11 years when it comes to investigating this crime, the transcripts provided to Montenegrin investigators by Europol in 2021 mention who Osmanagić's alleged executioner was.
On February 16, 2021, Delić revealed the name of the alleged murderer to the accused undercover agent.
He did this after the latter complained to him that the leaders of the Skaljar clan, Vladan Radoman and now deceased Jovan Vukotic, armed with "black arrows" and, as he claims, planning to kill his father, a police official Zoran Lazović and the president of the state Milo Đukanović.
Lazović then accused the Serbian service of helping the Skaljari people.
"Brother, the guys from Skalja, Jovica and Radoman, bought two 12,7 mm sniper rifles, a black arrow that pierces everything, with the help of the Serbian service, for Dad and Milo, the whole story was blown up to mask it. The BIA helped them with the transfer, a lot of people participated with money, i.e. goods and people and executors, and some old cadres, they think that Mile Radulović "With Milo and Zoran, that he is a product of the service and a collaborator and they want to solve it. The black arrow pierces every blind and the one that Milo drives, b12 ... Go through everything you can and give every address so that it is known both on the street and in prison," Lazović wrote to Budvanin that day.
Delić, who has been in the Supška Remand Prison since the end of May on charges of being part of a drug cartel formed by Radoje Zvicer and Vaso Ulić, said at the time that this must be addressed:
"Oh, fuck them, I want everything, brother, rest assured, this has to be resolved, there's no going back... We need to watch out for that ******** ***********, he's Musa in Br..., he's their sniper in charge... What a guy, my brother, now we have to be united like never before, believe me, everything comes from my city... this is your hub... This has to be stopped," he wrote to him.
Osmanagić's name has been mentioned in criminal circles since he was an older juvenile in the early 1990s. According to police records, he was the leader of a powerful Bar clan.
Due to long-standing conflicts with the clan of the deceased Luka Đurović, for years he had a strong security ring, and he always used armored cars for driving.
Before each entry into the car, the people from his team would check the surroundings, as well as the vehicle floor, to ensure that Osmanagić was safe.
Osmanagić did not stay long in any of the other bars he went to in Bar...
However, that did not save him - on September 16, 2014, he was killed by a shot from a "Red Flag" sniper rifle, caliber 7,9 mm.
In the first hours of the investigation into the murder in the center of the port city, "Vijesti" was told that the bullet that hit him in the back passed directly through Baranin's heart.
He passed away on the way to the hospital.
"Vijesti" then, citing sources from the Bar police, announced that investigators believe that at least two people participated in Osmanagić's murder - one, as suspected, was in charge of driving the stolen Renault Megane, and the other of killing him with a sniper. Police data indicate that the shots were fired from that vehicle.
After firing the shot, it took the killers less than two minutes to get from the parking lot on Jovana Tomaševića Street, across the roundabout at "Volija", to the train station in Bar, where they set fire to the car in the bushes of a dead end street.
In an overgrown alley next to the abandoned tracks at the end of the Belgrade-Bar railway, they poured water on and set fire to a "Renault" with Ljubljana license plates, where they disappeared without a trace. The police soon found the charred remains of the vehicle and an almost completely destroyed sniper rifle with an optical sight inside.
Forensic teams spent hours that day trying to find DNA traces from the destroyed Renault, and then cut through parts of the burnt sheet metal to try to find the shell casing.
After the murder of Osmanagić, a special police unit arrived in Bar, stopping and searching almost all cars and drivers at checkpoints in the city.
During the day, dozens of members of criminal clans were brought in for questioning, mostly individuals from the group of the late Luka Đurović.
To date, no one has been suspected of participating in that liquidation.
Almost simultaneously with the fatal shots fired at his friend, the now deceased Baranin, Jovan Klisic He took a weapon and shot at the garden of the "La Esquina" bar, which is owned by the brother of the late Luka Đurović, the alleged leader of the criminal clan with whom Osmanagić had a conflict.
Towards the end of the proceedings, the prosecutor changed the indictment, so Klisić was sentenced to nine months in prison for causing general danger, and not for attempted murder.
According to the indictment, Klisić intentionally caused danger to the life and limb of the bar's guests. Dragana Pečurica and two unidentified persons, firing 12 bullets at the store
Osmanagić also wanted for the murder of Duško Jovanović
Armin Musa Osmanagić's name was mentioned in the investigation into the murder of "Dan" editor Duško Jovanović.
In September 2004, Osmanagić was named as one of the participants in that liquidation by the then Assistant Minister of Internal Affairs, now deceased Mićo Orlandić.
At that time, 100 days after Jovanović's murder, he said that "they are looking for Osmanagić and Vuk Vulević all over Europe," but neither of them was ever officially suspected of that crime.
After a year in hiding, Osmanagić returned to Montenegro, and after two days of detention it was said that there was no evidence that he was in the "Golf 27" from which the editor of "Dan" was shot on the night of May 2004, 3.
The editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Dan" and a former MP was killed on May 27, 2004. He was shot dead with automatic weapons as he left the editorial office of the daily newspaper he owned.
So far, only Damir Mandić from Podgorica has been convicted of participation in the murder. In April 2017, the Appellate Court upheld the verdict for complicity and sentenced him to 19 years in prison.
In addition to the perpetrators and those who ordered the murder, those who conducted the investigation so that the truth will never be established escape justice. It has not been determined who is responsible for the fact that there have been no serious results for almost two decades.
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