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One of the twin brothers in front of Biser Mitrev’s house in Sofia
The special court of appeal released the boxer
Biser Mitrev with a guarantee of BGN 25,000,
A month ago he rejected freedom to
twins Georgi and Nikola Assenovi
The name of Lyubomir Kostadinov-Lyubo Mladezha appeared in the investigation into the beating of the editor-in-chief of “168 hours” Slavi Angelov.
On Thursday, one of the three defendants, Biser Mitrev, was released on bail of BGN 25,000. One of the reasons for the court is that he was part of the Lubo Mladezha group years ago, but split up.
Exactly one month ago, the Specialized Criminal Court of Appeals refused to release the other two, the twins Nikola and Georgi Assenovi. Evidence from an obvious witness shows that the Assenovs were part of the criminal group “Sofia West”, led by Lubo Mladezha and associated with drug distribution, usury and beatings of various people. However, the twins’ participation in Lubo Mladezha’s group was before 2019. Their words were confirmed by three anonymous witnesses. One of them even said that he knew of Slavi Angelov’s order to be crushed. It was handed over in February 2020 to people who have not been questioned so far. He was then assigned to twins Nikola and Georgi Assenovi, and they involved Biser Mitrev in the planning and commission of the crime. All three are boxers and part of the blue propaganda.
After the arrest of the three in April, some of the Sofia West leaders were summoned for questioning by the police, but not Lyubomir Kostadinov. None of them have been accused of mediating a possible guarantor and none of the witnesses have cited them as such.
The evidence
against the three
perpetrators
however, they are in
abundance,
and for Mitrev they are even more than for twins, a 24-hour inspection showed.
On the night of the attack, Nikola and Georgi Assenovi went to a meeting with Biser Mitrev in his “Audi A6” car, registered to the wife of one of the two. They look in the parking lot and talk. The three go to Slavi Angelov’s address in an Opel, which is used by Mitrev.
The movement of the cars was monitored by cameras throughout Sofia. Then
forensic scientists
find blood of
Slavi Angelov in
the template of
opela,
with which Mitrev moved. Inside is a hat with biological prints of the twins. Fas with DNA from Biser Mitrev was also found at the crime scene on Dondukov Blvd., where the editor-in-chief of 168 Hours lives. Four obvious witnesses said in their testimony that Mitrev used the same car. In addition, there are video examinations of recordings showing the three during the beating, as well as during their escape. His movement was also detected in the cells of mobile operators.
On Thursday, Biser Mitrev arrived at court with crutches, a blue suit and a plastic bag in hand, hoping that the second instance of the court would overturn the decision of the first to deny him freedom. During the hearing, the accused read a book calmly. According to his defense, during his stay behind bars his health deteriorated. He has been receiving treatment at the Sofia Penitentiary Hospital for a month. There, his doctors performed an MRI. He needed an emergency operation.
Before he was arrested for beating Slavi Angelov, who worked as his grandmother’s personal assistant, the case became clear. Therefore, I was receiving BGN 610 per month, plus paid insurance. He also owned part of the house at 20 Cherkovna Street in the capital, where criminal investigators and the prosecution arrested him in April. Mitrev, Georgi Assenov and Nikola Assenov are charged with criminal association, beatings and drug possession. Two doses of cocaine were found in each of them.
Slavi Angelov: The important thing is yes
be in prison, not in custody
“I am not surprised by the release of one of those arrested for beating me on March 17. From the beginning, I warned my family members not to forget that we live in Bulgaria, where it is more prudent not to put yourself in vain in search of reprisals. Strange, of course, are these court decisions: Biser Mitrev, now released from the appeals court, was left in custody in the first instance. The opposite happened with the twin Asenov brothers: the first instance released them and the second returned them to custody. I wonder, naturally, in this disagreement: are magistrates’ decisions subject to rules and standards? But in the end, the important thing is that when someone has committed a crime, they are not arrested, but imprisoned. If this will happen, time will tell. As I mentioned, I am not optimistic. My whole life, for 26 years, my job has been to help people who have been screwed up by the Bulgarian justice. I have researched and told hundreds of such stories. Perhaps the time has finally come for me to join this great statistical group: Bulgarians, victims of private crimes of retribution. “
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