Former Serb police officer Goran Saric said he was innocent of war crimes in the Sarajevo settlement of Nahorevo in 1992 as the court announced it would deliver its verdict in August.
The Bosnian state prosecutor said that former Serb police chief Goran Saric should be found guilty of war crimes in the Sarajevo settlement of Nahorevo in 1992.
An expert witness in police issues testifies for the Defence and says that indictee Goran Saric was never appointed Chief of the Public Safety Station of the Serb municipality of Centar.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Sarajevo, a military expert witness says that combat activities in the Nahorevo area in 1992 did not target the local civilian population.
At the trial for crimes committed in Sarajevo, a witness for the Defence stated that having arrived to Jagomir Hospital where the police station was supposed to be located, he did not find any equipment or a sufficient number of police officers.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Sarajevo, a Defence witness says that he saw indictee Goran Saric in front of the Local Community building in Nahorevo and Jagomir in 1992.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Sarajevo, witness Bogdan Rasevic says that people from the Nahorevo area went to Jagomir in 1992 in order to be examined.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in the Sarajevo area, a Defence witness says that he saw that his neighbours from Nahorevo were detained in the Jagomir hospital building.
Testifying at the trial of Goran Saric, who is charged with crimes in Sarajevo, a Defence witness says that the Public Safety Station, whose chief, according to the charges, was Saric, did not even exist.
During the continuation of the trial of Goran Saric for crimes in Sarajevo a protected State Prosecution witness says that she received a letter from her husband, who asked her to pay for his release from Jagomir hospital, but, after having paid the amount, she found him dead at Skakavac.