Ivica Todorić has been spending time in Zagreb’s Remetinec prison since his extradition from Britain to Croatia to face trial for his alleged crimes in Agrokor, his former company. The trial however, still appears to have no set date, at least not publicly.
Despite his year long attempts and final appeal while living in London to stop the British decision to extradite him having failed, he continued to fight for his right to freedom following his arrival in Croatia, with his lawyers questioning why he needs to be behind bars when he poses no threat of influence over any witnesses.
In response to this, the Croatian authorities have claimed that while that might be true, his flight risk is still very high, especially given his ”trip” to London, which lasted an entire year, at a very crucial time. Todorić himself still claims this was a pure coincidence, that he had to be in London for business, and that he wasn’t escaping anything.
Recently, his freedom had a price of 7.5 million kuna placed on it, and while the former Agrokor boss may indeed possess that in assets, the clause was that it had to be paid in cold hard cash, which looked like it was about to throw a wet blanket on the entire idea. Until today.
As Poslovni Dnevnik writes on the 20th of November, 2018, Ivica Todorić’s defense team sent their proposal to Zagreb County Court, and a confirmation of the payment having been paid is now being awaited, according to N1.
What this means is that Ivica Todorić has paid the one million euro bail fee, and Agrokor’s former owner will likely soon be released from Remetinec. This information was confirmed to Telegram by a source close to the Todorić family.
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