r

BIA pumped that we were working on Vučić's head: Lazović and Šarić called claims about their hostility nonsense

The policeman forwarded a message to Pljevljak in which the author states that they received information about the conflict between Šarić and Lazović in the context of the story about the attack on Vučić.

"Someone from Bija sent this on purpose, someone is coming up with a story or plan against both us and you, what can you expect from them... How can they come up with the idea to invent it," Lazović wrote.

61668 views 72 reactions 30 comment(s)
Lazović is being escorted to the High Court building in Podgorica, Photo: Boris Pejović
Lazović is being escorted to the High Court building in Podgorica, Photo: Boris Pejović
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

Police officer Petar Lazovic and the accused drug lord Darko Saric They called the claims from the Serbian Security Information Agency (BIA) - that they were working on the head of the local president - ridiculous. Aleksandar Vučić, but also that they are in conflict with each other.

The former secret agent communicated with Pljevljak about this at the end of October 2020 via a then-protected telephone program and sent him a forwarded message written by a female person from the Serbian secret service.

The author of that SMS asks the interlocutor what kind of conflict the Lazovićs and Šarićs are in, and then explains that they received the information about it in the context of possible attacks on Vučić.

"What do the Šarićs have against Lazović? I thought they were good. There's nothing concrete. But now there's a fuss about Vučić's security, so people are coming to us from all sides who are trying to kill him. Well, Lazović is being cited from Montenegro, and within that, Šarićs and Lazović are in conflict," reads the message that Lazović forwarded to Šarić.

The message that Lazović on Sky forwards to Šarić
The message that Lazović on Sky forwards to Šarićphoto: Sky/Vijesti

The person who received the message writes that this is not true: "They are lying. No one is working on Vučić's head from here... Šarić is not interested... Something should happen," he replies.

"You fool, my brother," adds the alleged BIA officer.

After the then active police officer sent him that message, he stated: "Look at the scum from the BIA."

Šarić continues: "What nonsense is this, and sick people create it, so one moment we're not well, and then we're working on this together, ridiculous."

Lazović then explains to him the source of this information to some extent.

"Someone from Bija sent this on purpose, someone is coming up with a story or plan against us and you, what can you expect from them, just be careful, this will go through their heads... How could they come up with the idea to invent it," the policeman explained.

"That's always been their strategy - lies. We hold on and move on and defend ourselves," he continues.

"Forever!", Lazović replies.

Old acquaintances

"Vijesti" previously wrote extensively about the Sky communication between Petar Lazović and Darko Šarić, which the Special State Prosecutor's Office included in the case files.

According to those messages, Lazović wrote to him about himself as an operative "on the ground" who controls police actions, the border and the port of Bar, but also as a man who watches the backs of the people at the top of the Kavač clan.

In one of the segments, we see how Šarić, through Petar Lazović, arranges to lend his father, then-assistant police director Zoran Lazović, half a million euros, six days before the 2020 parliamentary elections.

During this correspondence, he explains that he gave the money "for the elections and for the boys."

Investigators suspect that on behalf of Pljevlja, Šarić's associate Milan Vučinić asked for money at a meeting in a Podgorica restaurant on August 20, 2020.

"What do the Šarićs have against Lazović? I thought they were good. There is nothing concrete. But now there is a fuss about Vučić's security, so people are coming to us from all sides who are trying to kill him. Well, Lazović is mentioned from Montenegro, and within that, Šarićs and Lazović are in conflict," the message that Lazović forwarded to Šarić states.

In mid-2020, Lazović informed Šarić that he had prevented his fellow police officers from seizing armored cars from members of the criminal clan from Pljevlja.

"Yesterday I didn't let the blind be taken. Spaske and Kubanac. Goran and Nikola. I didn't let them yesterday. Brother, I'm watching them, all of ours. Those who don't rush, the only one who messed up is this Bajčo. He got into it with these Banovićs, and they're on a hundred chairs. I'm watching all of ours and they know it, I don't know if they're telling you. And Delfina too. Not many would be wandering around if you were here!", writes the then member of the Sector for Combating Organized Crime and Corruption in July 2020, revealing details of police actions.

You have a brother who is ready for anything.

The decision of the Belgrade Higher Court to convict Darko Šarić for money laundering infuriated security guard Petar Lazović, who verbally lashed out at Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić, the current head of the Serbian secret service BIA, Aleksandar Vulin, and controversial businessman Stanko Can Subotić...

This is shown by encrypted Sky telephone communications that "Vijesti" had access to.

"If I know what to write to you all day, I'll write 10 times, erase, that's it. Here I am with Z. What to do, can anything be done, should I say anything to Z that needs to be done!!! ...F*ck them and Vučić for fucking Vulin and that vitamin from Can, I'm f*cking on them!!! So let them read and listen to everything, shit... Anyway, you have a younger brother who's ready for anything and we're not going to be alone if we surrender to those gypsies," the police officer sends to the alleged drug lord on the day he was sentenced.

With the verdict that the policeman insulted and cursed the president of Serbia and a local businessman, Šarić was sentenced to nine years in prison for money laundering.

Bonus video: