THE HEARING LASTED MORE THAN TWO HOURS: Miladin Kovacevic was in the police, this is what his lawyer told reporters



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He testified at the Savski Venac police station, where he was accompanied by the lawyer Ivan Gvozdenec, on the occasion of this event, and the interrogation lasted for about two and a half hours.

Visibly upset, Gvozdenac nearly ran out of the station. He briefly told the assembled journalists:

– The stigmatization of Miladin Kovačević continues!

By order of the First Basic Prosecutor’s Office in Belgrade, the search for Kovacevic was announced. He is charged with two crimes: endangering security and abusing and torturing Tina T. The prosecution also alleges that on Wednesday the Savski Venac police informed the deputy prosecutor on duty that a woman had denounced Kovacevic for the crime of putting in safety hazard.

Later, the prosecution ordered the collection of information on the injured girl, verifying the existence and taking images from the security cameras of the place. They also demanded the questioning of the suspect Kovacevic, as well as the filing of criminal charges against him for endangering security.

A court order was issued for the former athlete because he was unavailable to prosecutors after Tina T. filed charges against him. By the way, the Prosecutor’s Office points out that the girl who reported the case to the police did not request medical assistance. What actually happened in the apartment will be determined after the police investigation.

Lawyer Ivan Gvozdenac / Photo: Z. Jovanović

Kovacevic has been known to the Serbian public for the case since May 2008, when he brutally beat his colleague from the Bston faculty, Brian Steinhauer, and for which he was prosecuted in Serbia after fleeing the United States. Two years later, following a plea agreement, he was sentenced to two years and three months in prison by the First Court of First Instance in Belgrade for the aforementioned criminal act. He was detained for two months in Belgrade, which was included in his sentence, and one month in the United States.

He was released in Sombor at the end of November 2012, a few days before the full sentence expired, following the application of the Amnesty Law. Then the state of Serbia set aside $ 900,000 from the budget to compensate the beaten student.

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