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Luka Bojović (47), who is serving a sentence in a Spanish prison, was questioned as a suspect in connection with the 2008 murder of Goran Pejović in Budva, and on that occasion claimed that he had nothing to do with this crime.
– Unfortunately, that interrogation did not help or give us any information in terms of clarifying and revealing other perpetrators – said Lepa Medenica, spokesperson for the Superior State Prosecutor’s Office and top state prosecutor, according to the Podgorica “Vijesti”.
The prosecution is also conducting an investigation against Sretko Kalinic, a 46-year-old member of the Zemun clan of Sretko Kalinic, who is believed to have mistakenly killed Goran Pejovic of Niksic on August 11, 2008 in the garden of Café “Palma “on the promenade of Budva.
In 2010, after his arrest in Zagreb, Kalinic admitted to Croatian investigators that he should have killed Ivan Delic, but that he mistakenly killed a young man wearing the same shirt as Budvanin. However, he later withdrew that confession and exercised his legal right not to answer the prosecutor’s questions.
– Apart from numerous actions undertaken through international judicial assistance, this prosecution questioned the defendant SK on two occasions through a request sent to the Republic of Serbia, and on both occasions the questioning was carried out in the presence of the prosecutors of this prosecution and unfortunately on both occasions the defendant exercised his right and defended his silence. For now, the Prosecutor’s Office does not have as much evidence with which to go to the accusation. The prosecutor Medenica responded to the question “whether the evidence gathered so far is sufficient for Kalinic to appear in court.”
Sretko Kalinic was sentenced to three decades in prison in Serbia for participating in the murder of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic and the crimes of the “Zemun clan”, and an investigation was launched against him in Montenegro four years ago for the murder of Goran Pejovic.
A young man from Nikšić was killed the day before his birthday, while sitting with another Vojkan Inić in the garden of a cafe on the Budva waterfront. He was wearing a gray T-shirt. Ivan Delic wore the same color shirt, sitting a few tables away. The killer, disguised in a wig and hat, approached the table where Pejović and Inić were sitting, and with the words “Greetings from Belgrade” fired 13 shots at the two. Pejovic was mortally wounded, Inic was seriously wounded, while the killer escaped. He kept a wig. Delic, aware that the shots were aimed at him, left the bar ten minutes after the crime.
Immediately after the murder, the media reported statements by some investigators that the young man from Nikšić was mistakenly murdered and that Delic was the real target. The message the killer sent to Pejović indicated that Luka Bojović’s team was behind the liquidation.
Two years later, Kalinic, suspected of firing fatal shots immediately after the crime, was arrested in Croatia, as was fugitive Milos Simovic. At a hearing, he admitted that he mistakenly killed a young man dressed in a gray T-shirt instead of Delic, but later withdrew that confession.
Almost eight years after this crime, Montenegrin investigators have officially announced that Kalinic is suspected of killing Pejovic, but to date no charges have been filed against him, although, according to some media, the DNA of the hat coincided that the killer left in the cafe garden. with the biological material of this “dugout”.
While Kalinic was immediately linked to the murder in a cafe garden on Budva promenade, the investigation did not determine, or at least the police and prosecutors did not reveal who provided logistical support and helped him escape Montenegro and try to find refuge in Croatia.
Arrested in 2012 in Valencia
Luka Bojović was arrested in Valencia in February 2012. He was sentenced to 18 years in prison in Spain for organized crime. He was sentenced to three years in prison for falsification of documents, five years for criminal association and ten years in prison for possession of a weapon.
In Serbia, he was once charged with the murder of Branko Jeftović Jorge and the attempted murder of Andrija Drašković and Zoran Nedović Šok in 2004, as well as the murder of his bodyguards Dejan Živančević and Milutin Jovićić, who were killed in the assassination attempts. He was acquitted of all those charges. Although his name was linked to other crimes, investigators did not gather material evidence to support their suspicions.
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