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CRIME

Gambling baron faces new tax crime charges

One of Sweden's most notorious gangsters, currently on trial for instigating murder, was indicted on Thursday on charges of financial crimes and illicit gambling.

55-year-old Rade Kotur, often referred to in the Swedish press as “Spelkungen” (The Gambling King), is already on trial for allegedly instigating murder and attempted murder in what is set to be one Sweden’s most watched gangster trials.

According to these latest charges, the suspect’s gambling business had a turnover of at least 463 million kronor ($74 million) between January 1st 2005 and November 13th 2007.

Kotur is being charged with grievous tax crimes and false accounting in an alleged attempt to shield from Sweden’s tax authorities hundreds of millions of kronor generated from his gaming operations.

According to Erica Sommerfors, chief prosecutor at the Swedish National Economic Crimes Bureau, the charges of illegal gambling against Kotor are the biggest ever in Sweden.

“As far as I know, this is the biggest case for this type of crime”, she told the TT news agency.

According to the prosecutor, the suspect is highly responsible for the financial crimes.

“There is no doubt that he is the boss pulling all the strings,” she told TT.

He is already on trial for his suspected involvement in the killing of Ratko Djokic, who was gunned down by two men in dark clothing outside a boxing club in the south Stockholm suburb of Skärholmen in May 2003.

Djokic, known as The Godfather, operated a rival gambling operation at the time. His daughter was also married to 39-year-old Milan Sevo, who police consider to be the king of the Serbian underworld in Sweden.

Sevo fled to Serbia in 2004 and authorities have been unsuccessful in their attempts to locate him for their case against Kotur.

A 35-year-old hit man, Nenad Misovic, was sentenced to life in prison for Djokic’s murder. He too is set to be tried in Gothenburg District Court for having attempted to murder another man in September 2002 on orders from Kotur.

Misovic is one of the prosecution’s key witnesses in its case against Kotur.

The victim of the murder attempt, now 44-years-old, managed to escape from the attack, which took place in the Stockholm suburb of Fisksätra, and is also scheduled to testify.

According to Dagens Nyheter, police theorize that Kotur ordered the killing because the 44-year-old had wanted to start his own gaming operation and Kotur saw the move as a threat to his own gaming empire.

Kotur was arrested in Britain in November last year, following a massive raid on his suspected illegal gambling operations, in which 400 slot machines were confiscated from 150 different locations throughout the country.

The 44-year-old victim failed to appear in court Monday morning as the prosecution presented its case because, according to the prosecutor, he wants to avoid the limelight.

Earlier, prosecutor Krister Petersson explained for the Expressen newspaper that he faces several challenges in convincing many key witnesses to testify in the case.

“People who are deeply entrenched in the gangster world refuse to testify,” he told Expressen.

“Witnesses who come forward change or withdraw their testimony.”

Originally from the former Yugoslavia, Kotur came to Sweden in the 1970s.

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Kotur built up the RK Company, which operated automated poker and slot machines in pizzerias and convenience stores throughout Sweden.

According to an investigation by the Göteborgs-Posten newspaper in 2005, RK Company controlled several thousand gaming machines which made up a large part of Sweden’s estimated 5 billion kronor ($820 million) illegal gaming market.

Kotur’s trial for instigated and attempted murders is expected to last until October.

LANDSLIDE

Swedish authorities: Worker negligence behind motorway landslide

Swedish authorities said on Thursday that worker negligence at a construction site was believed to be behind a landslide that tore apart a motorway in western Sweden in September.

Swedish authorities: Worker negligence behind motorway landslide

The landslide, which struck the E6 highway in Stenungsund, 50 kilometres north of Sweden’s second-largest city Gothenburg, ripped up a petrol station car park, overturned lorries and caved in the roof of a fast food restaurant.

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Prosecutor Daniel Veivo Pettersson said on Thursday he believed “human factors” were behind the landslide as “no natural cause” had been found during the investigation.

He told a press conference the landslide had been triggered by a nearby construction site where too much excavated material had been piled up, putting excessive strain on the ground below. 

“At this stage, we consider it negligent, in this case grossly negligent, to have placed so much excavated material on the site,” Pettersson said.

Pettersson added that three people were suspected of among other things gross negligence and causing bodily harm, adding that the investigation was still ongoing.

The worst-hit area covered around 100 metres by 150 metres, but the landslide affected an area of around 700 metres by 200 metres in total, according to emergency services.

Three people were taken to hospital with minor injuries after the collapse, according to authorities.

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