Constitutional Judge Turns Out to Be Abuser of Thousands of Euros, Smugglers of Goods in Serbia

On May 28th 2007, the Special Prosecutor in Belgrade had filed charges against 28 people, including Radomir Ljubljana, the third for the crime burden. The indictment provided by Kohavision shows that at the time, Laban had been on the job of informing officer in Serbia's Customs and as such, [...]
On May 28th 2007, the Special Prosecutor in Belgrade had filed charges against 28 people, including Radomir Ljubljana, the third for the crime burden.
The indictment provided by Kohavision shows that at the time, Ljubljana had been on the job of informing official in Serbia's Customs and, as such, mishandled the official post, KTV reported.
With the aim of personal gain, Ljubljana had demanded and accepted money so that goods it brings to Serbia did not charge them through customs control, with the aim of avoiding customs and VAT duties.
He had co-operated closely with two anti-corruption co-ordinators, Valibor Lukovovic and Dejan Ratkovovic, and in one of the cases had introduced merchandise from Montenegro to Serbia, avoiding customs.
While some of the goods had initially been brought to Kosovo on behalf of Kosovo businesses with forged documents only to avoid taxes, the same had immediately returned to Serbia.
They had also managed to evade the UNMIK administration at the time.
On April 26th 2006, they had managed to bring it through the border checkpoint in Rudnica, worth about 34 thousand euros.
According to Serbian media, Ljubljana had been arrested along with the group of 17 people in 2006, until 2012 allegedly the Constitutional Court in Belgrade had convicted him.
The Kosovo Assembly has elected Laban to the Constitutional Court, but the president has warned that he will not decree it until his past is verified.











