City emergency service reinstates drug dealer

A convicted drug dealer who served almost four years in jail for smuggling heroin has been given back his job with the Belgrade Emergency Medical Service.

Izvor: Blic

Tuesday, 16.10.2012.

11:27

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BELGRADE A convicted drug dealer who served almost four years in jail for smuggling heroin has been given back his job with the Belgrade Emergency Medical Service. The Belgrade-based tabloid Blic named the man as 50-year-old Milo Radevic. City emergency service reinstates drug dealer In 2008, Radevic, his brothers Dragan and Miodrag, and Samir Dedeic from Rozaje, northern Montenegro, were arrested along with three kilograms of heroin, worth some EUR 200,000. The police also seized mixed caffeine and paracetamol, as well as weapons and ammunition during their arrest. The police found 401 grams of heroin and a pistol in Radovic's car as he was being detained. A month and a half after he was released from prison, Radevic was back in his job, driving an ambulance. The service did not publish an ad for the job, and signed the contract with Radevic directly, saying that "when a new worker is needed people who are properly qualified are being hired". Furthermore, the convicted dealer is described as "the sole breadwinner" in his family that includes a wife and two minor daughters, while his pre-arrest record as an ambulance driver was "impeccable". Finally, the Emergency Medical Service said that no law or regulation was broken when he was hired, and that while their decision was "perhaps not ethical" - nobody had the right to discriminate against Radevic because of his stint in jail. (stock) Blic

City emergency service reinstates drug dealer

In 2008, Radević, his brothers Dragan and Miodrag, and Samir Dedeić from Rožaje, northern Montenegro, were arrested along with three kilograms of heroin, worth some EUR 200,000.

The police also seized mixed caffeine and paracetamol, as well as weapons and ammunition during their arrest.

The police found 401 grams of heroin and a pistol in Radović's car as he was being detained.

A month and a half after he was released from prison, Radević was back in his job, driving an ambulance.

The service did not publish an ad for the job, and signed the contract with Radević directly, saying that "when a new worker is needed people who are properly qualified are being hired".

Furthermore, the convicted dealer is described as "the sole breadwinner" in his family that includes a wife and two minor daughters, while his pre-arrest record as an ambulance driver was "impeccable".

Finally, the Emergency Medical Service said that no law or regulation was broken when he was hired, and that while their decision was "perhaps not ethical" - nobody had the right to discriminate against Radević because of his stint in jail.

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