After the Supreme Court of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina ruled that the trial of Alija Delimustafić and other defendants for illegal registration and resale of real estate and other criminal offenses will continue before the Cantonal Court in Sarajevo, the trial has been scheduled for October 28, it was confirmed to Detektor.
Attorney Sabina Mehić, who defends the defendant Kemo Kapur, confirmed that the hearing has been scheduled for October 28, when two witnesses are scheduled to be heard.
“The court has decided that the indictment will not be read again, so as not to delay the proceedings. She believes that everyone is familiar with the indictment. There were a few fellow lawyers who opposed it, who believe that such a method is illegal, but the Court still maintained its position that the indictment will not be read again,” said Mehić.
The Supreme Court of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina decided that the case would continue to be heard in the Cantonal Court in Sarajevo, at the request of this court, which requested that the Special Department of the Supreme Court for Corruption, Organized and Intercantonal Crime (POSKOK) assume jurisdiction in this case.
The request for a decision on jurisdiction was requested after the Special Department began operating at the end of April this year, 10 years after the adoption of the law that provided for its establishment.
Alija Delimustafić, Izet Musić, Zoran Lončar, Emir Karača, Elvira Kreho, Džemal Karić, Lejla Cerić, Suada Hadžić, Edina Mutevelić, Kemo Kapur, Enver Delimustafić, Samira Skorupan, Sead Hadžić, Zaim Spahović, Ševala Arnautović, Judge Lejla Fazlagić-Pašić, and several legal entities are accused of organized crime, illegal registration, resale of real estate, and other criminal offenses.
The indictment in that case was confirmed in 2017, after numerous delays, the trial of Delimustafić and others began in April last year, and the reading of the indictment lasted several hearings. The Detector also wrote about the costs of more than one million BAM that had previously been allocated for that case.


