"If they killed me, I'd have a beautiful funeral on the state's dime and all that would be left is a plaque on the wall with my name on it somewhere near the toilets," says former elite police officer Michal sadly. He is currently in hiding abroad because he fears for his life in the democratic Czech Republic, twenty years after the November coup. Two cases he investigated in 2007 took him out of his normal routine. When he discovered that the death of an Armenian citizen and the murder of the Sazka driver had a common denominator, he began to unravel the structures of the criminal underworld. The head of the Russian-language mafia (Andranik Soghoyan), the so-called "raft in the law", became his adversary. The policeman convicted his adversary. But when the Czech court acquitted the mafia boss, Michal suddenly felt the hot ground under his feet... The documentary is not available on iBroadcast for licensing reasons...
The public broadcaster CT holds a licence for the communication of the work in question (the document was produced by CT Ostrava). CT does not hold a licence for broadcasting the work and making it available to the public as part of the broadcaster's supplementary online service, because the document includes archive materials from the NFA? Therefore, the document was never available on iBroadcast. It was broadcast in the premiere on 10 March 2011 at 20:20 hours, repeated on 7 February 2013 at 04:25 hours and on 17 April 2014 at 02:25 hours on CT2. How many people probably watch TV at night and in the morning? Isn't the permanent accessibility of such a documentary in the public interest? The "raft in the law" would surely welcome and welcome it.
You can watch the film below. Conditions in the Police have not changed, perhaps they are even worse. I wrote about the course of the trial of Andranik Soghoyanaj at the Prague CJ in 2013. Unfortunately, the bailiff deliberately destroyed most of my archive. The trial was conducted by the "Pankrác executioner" JUDr. Jiří Lněnička. I am afraid that the Russian-speaking mafia still operates on our territory today. It may also have a hand in the removal of Czech TV reporter Jiri Hynek, who covered it intensively... JŠ
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