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NEWS > 25 October 2006

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Serbia: Police inspectors puni
BELGRADE -- Inspectors who worked on a corruption case involving power monopoly EPS have been demoted or retired.

Danas daily reported Monday that Belgrade’s First Criminal Police Department Deputy Chief Dejan Svilar and Inspector Predrag Pavlica were demoted and transferred to other duties, while Inspector Petar Damjanac, who wrote and filed the charges, was sent into retirement.

Serbian police (MUP) Criminal Police Chief Darko Senić refused to comment on the news, and asked reporters to instead file an official query via MUP’s press bureau.

Unofficial sourc... Read more

 Article sourced from

The Australian - Sydney,Austra
25 October 2006
This article appeared in the above title/site.
To view it in its entirity click this link.


Iemma briefed on gang-rape pro

NSW PREMIER Morris Iemma today called for an official explanation of a report that police bungled an investigation into a series of gang rapes of a teenage girl in Sydney.

The 13-year-old Enfield girl told police she was gang-raped in 2003, and was raped again in February and March 2004, with at least one man involved in two of the three attacks, The Daily Telegraph reported today.

No arrests have been made over the rapes and a review of the case by Taskforce Textile criticises police for failing to apply "basic investigative techniques".

Police reprotdely have the names and addresses of some suspects.

In all three sexual assault investigations, vital clues were not followed, suspects were not questioned and statements were not taken from those who could corroborate the girl's allegation, the Telegraph said.

The detective handling the case was last year exposed as a corrupt officer.

Former detective sergeant Chris Laycock admitted to the Police Integrity Commission he tipped off a child pornography suspect in an unrelated case.

The girl's father is seeking justice for his daughter and has gone public, expressing outrage over the way the case was handled.

Mr Iemma said the father had every right to be outraged over the attack on his daughter.

"He should have justice and he should be outraged at the attack on his daughter," Mr Iemma said.

"I'm aware of the report. I am getting a more detailed report this morning because I understand it has moved forward," he said on Southern Cross radio.

"Now the extent to which it has progressed, that's what I will be getting briefed on this morning."

 

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