Bosnian War Criminal Sentenced to 70 Months in Federal Prison
TUCSON, Ariz. – Sinisa Djurdjic, 50, a citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina (“Bosnia”) and a Tucson resident, was sentenced yesterday by United States District Judge Jennifer G. Zipps to 70 months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. On May 19, 2023, after a nine-day trial, a federal jury found Djurdjic guilty of Visa Fraud and two separate counts of Attempted Unlawful Procurement of Citizenship.
The evidence at trial revealed that Djurdjic emigrated to Tucson under the United States refugee program in 2000. Nine years later, Homeland Security Investigations launched an investigation after receiving a roster of a Serbian police brigade suspected of various wartime atrocities during the 1990s. Djurdjic was listed as a member of the brigade. The multi-year international investigation, and the evidence presented at trial, showed that Djurdjic was indeed a member of that police brigade and other Bosnian-Serb military units and that he was a prison guard at two separate prison camps north of Sarajevo. Both prison camps were established by the “Republika Srpska,” the Bosnian-Serb military unit that espoused the idea of “ethnic cleansing” during the civil war. During that war, Bosnian Serbs sought to exclude all Bosnian Muslims and Catholic Croats to create a nation of only one ethnicity – Serbian.
During the trial, five Bosnian Muslims who were held at the prison camps testified that, as a prison guard, Djurdjic tortured prisoners in his custody for months in 1992. At trial extensive evidence demonstrated that Djurdjic obtained refugee status and permanent residence in the United States for two decades by lying about his prior military and police service. His lies prevented immigration authorities from making a fully informed decision regarding his applications for immigration benefits. As a result, Djurdjic secured a safe haven for himself in the United States to which he was not entitled and thereby escaped justice for his war crimes in Bosnia for over thirty years.
“Our lives were ruined by people like Sinisa but we managed to rebuild them and his conviction is one of the final bricks in our house of peace,” said one of the victims in his statement to the Court.
At sentencing, the judge found by clear and convincing evidence that Djurdjic committed the offenses to conceal his torture of prisoners of war as a prison guard in Bosnia and that he concealed his war crimes from immigration authorities.
Homeland Security Investigations, Tucson Field Office, conducted the investigation in this case. Assistant United States Attorneys Liza Granoff and Kevin Schiff, District of Arizona, Tucson, handled the prosecution.
CASE NUMBER: CR-17-1658-TUC-JGZ
RELEASE NUMBER: 2023-188_Djurdiic
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Public Affairs
Zach J. Stoebe
Telephone: (602) 514-7413
zachry.stoebe@usdoj.gov