The Investigator: Demons of the Balkan War

Author:   Vladimír Dzuro ,  Carla Del Ponte
Publisher:   Potomac Books Inc
ISBN:  

9781640121959


Pages:   400
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Investigator: Demons of the Balkan War


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Overview

The war that broke out in the former Yugoslavia at the end of the twentieth century unleashed unspeakable acts of violence committed against defenseless civilians, including a grizzly mass murder at an Ovcara pig farm in 1991. An international tribunal was set up to try the perpetrators of crimes such as this, and one of the accused was Slavko Dokmanovic, who at the time was the mayor of a local town. Vladimir Dzuro, a criminal detective from Prague, was one of the investigators charged with discovering what happened on that horrific night at Ovcara. The story Dzuro presents here, drawn from his daily notes, is devastating. It was a time of brutal torture, random killings, and the disappearance of innocent people. Dzuro provides a gripping account of how he and a handful of other investigators picked up the barest of leads that eventually led them to the gravesite where they exhumed the bodies. They were able to track down Dokmanovic, only to find that taking him into custody was a different story altogether. The politics that led to the war hindered justice once it ended. Without any thoughts of risk to their own personal safety, Dzuro and his colleagues were determined to bring Dokmanovic to justice. In addition to the story of the pursuit and arrest of Dokmanovic, The Investigator provides a realistic picture of the war crime investigations that led to the successful prosecution of a number of war criminals. AUTHOR: Vladimir Dzuro worked as a criminal detective between 1983 and 1995, initially investigating violent crime with the Criminal Investigation Department in Prague and later at the National Central Bureau of Interpol in Prague. He currently works at the United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services as chief of the New York Headquarters Office. 108 photographs, 7 illustrations, 5 maps

Full Product Details

Author:   Vladimír Dzuro ,  Carla Del Ponte
Publisher:   Potomac Books Inc
Imprint:   Potomac Books Inc
ISBN:  

9781640121959


ISBN 10:   1640121951
Pages:   400
Publication Date:   01 November 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Foreword Preface 1. From Interpol to The Hague 2. Operation Little Flower 3. The Tribulations of Slavko Dokmanović 4. How a Police Officer, a Dentist, and a Warehouseman Became the Presidents of the Republic of Serbian Krajina 5. The Case of Dubrovnik 6. Everything Is Controlled from Belgrade 7. Carla Del Ponte Visits Eastern Slavonia 8. The International Tribunal in the Eyes of a Czech Prosecutor 9. The Reckoning 10. Final Words Acknowledgments Appendix 1: List of People Appendix 2: List of Institutions Bibliography Index

Reviews

This is a detective story with a difference. . . . The Investigator is a raw and unique firsthand account of an extraordinary pursuit of justice in the face of absolute horror. - Julian Borger, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and world affairs editor for the Guardian Personal accounts of investigations of war crimes, such as this one by Vladimir Dzuro, breathe life into the abstract project of accountability and show the challenges of operating a criminal justice system in an international environment. - Louise Arbour, United Nations Special Representative for International Migration (2017-present) and chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (1996-99) In a captivating personal account, Vladimir Dzuro brings to life the early days of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and describes in detail how its investigators and prosecutors worked against incredible odds to bring to justice some of the worst war criminals of the twentieth century. It is the story of the birth of the modern era of international justice and of how, despite expectations to the contrary, this undertaking became a success. - Clint Williamson, U.S. ambassador at large for war crimes issues (2006-9) The Investigator is a fascinating story of a fight for truth and justice by bringing to trial in the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia the brutal murderers and assassins from the Balkans War. It is brilliant storytelling of this mass tragedy from a key investigator. - Philip Zimbardo, professor emeritus of psychology at Stanford University This was the most difficult war of all - a war between neighbors and friends, a war between people who had lived together in a functioning community for decades. We know that the physical wounds of war often heal faster than the psychological wounds. Bringing to justice those who perpetrated such heinous crimes will go far toward healing the psychological wounds. The efforts of Vladimir Dzuro and his colleagues did much to facilitate this healing process. - Jacques Paul Klein, former U.S. ambassador and former under-secretary-general of the United Nations To my knowledge Vladimir Dzuro's book is the first to explain the complexities, the frustrations, and finally the satisfaction of conducting investigations into the serious crimes that were committed during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia. It is above all the story of the people who suffered from those crimes and the investigators and lawyers who worked tirelessly to try and ensure that the alleged perpetrators faced trial for their part in those crimes. - Judge Joanna Korner, former prosecution senior trial attorney, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia The Investigator is rife with demons. Vladimir Dzuro details his life as an international criminal investigator, and like many of his colleagues at the Yugoslav and Rwanda Tribunals, he witnessed the unfathomable daily. Skills, teamwork, wit, and luck (bad and good) allowed him to squeeze justice out of profound depravity. Dzuro's book chronicles the real slog of international investigators and prosecutors. Hollywood fiction would shrink from his searing view of war crimes from under the wet tarpaulin of a mass grave. Notwithstanding, Dzuro ponders his experience by observing that 'humanity owes it to the scarred and broken people who open up their hearts to you.' It is also true that the best international investigators, like Dzuro, open up their hearts, in turn. - Patricia Viseur Sellers, special advisor for gender to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court For the war to really end, when the military conflict was over, the citizens of the former Yugoslavia needed closure that could only be provided by impartial justice. Our friend Vladimir Dzuro and his colleagues from the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia provided the only option. They put their own lives at risk so that others could have justice, and this book eloquently tells their story. - Ralph R. Johnson, U.S. ambassador to Sarajevo (1999-2001); and Lt. Col. Jacqueline M. Johnson, U.S. Army (Ret.), executive officer in the Office of the High Representative, Sarajevo (2000-2001) The Investigator reminds us that the United Nations is a body that can, at will, search out and hold accountable those individuals who orchestrate and enforce extreme violence on noncombatants. . . . Vladimir Dzuro's years of work with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia are a testament to the tenacity of persons dedicated to the investigations of war crimes. He and his colleagues deserve not only our admiration but most certainly our attention, as atrocities and genocide permeate the beginnings of the twenty-first century. Dzuro's narrative is fascinatingly clear and engaging; it also serves as a warning. - Ralph J. Hartley, adjunct professor of anthropology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia was an institution that should have never been needed in the twentieth century, but the internal conflict that erupted in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s precipitated large-scale war crimes committed by both civilian and military factions of the former Yugoslavian republics. The tribunal successfully identified and prosecuted war criminals from different sides of the conflict, which in turn brought at least some closure to those innocent victims who had suffered the most. - Kevin Curtis, chief of investigations, UNICEF, and former investigator and team leader at the Office of the Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia


Setting up the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was truly one of the most important cases I ever took to the Security Council. Despite the fact that people doubted it would work, it has been remarkable. The war was a tragedy and those involved needed to be punished. To this day, I say that the ICTY was essential-by assigning individual guilt we could expunge collective guilt. * Madeleine Albright, former United States Secretary of State, former Permanent Representative of the United States to the United Nations 07/06/2019 * Personal accounts of investigations of war crimes, such as this one by Vladimir Dzuro, breathe life into the abstract project of accountability and show the challenges of operating a criminal justice system in an international environment. * Louise Arbour, United Nations Special Representative for International Migration (2017-present) and chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (1996-99) * In a captivating personal account, Vladimir Dzuro brings to life the early days of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and describes in detail how its investigators and prosecutors worked against incredible odds to bring to justice some of the worst war criminals of the twentieth century. It is the story of the birth of the modern era of international justice and of how, despite expectations to the contrary, this undertaking became a success. * Clint Williamson, U.S. ambassador at large for war crimes issues (2006-9) 07/06/2019 * This was the most difficult war of all-a war between neighbors and friends, a war between people who had lived together in a functioning community for decades. We know that the physical wounds of war often heal faster than the psychological wounds. Bringing to justice those who perpetrated such heinous crimes will go far toward healing the psychological wounds. The efforts of Vladimir Dzuro and his colleagues did mich to facilitate this healing process. * Jacques Paul Klein, former U.S. ambassador and former under-secretary-general of the United Nations 07/06/2019 * To my knowledge Vladimir Dzuro's book is the first to explain the complexities, the frustrations, and finally the satisfaction of conducting investigations into the serious crimes that were committed during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia. It is above all the story of the people who suffered from those crimes and the investigators and lawyers who worked tirelessly to try and ensure tha the alleged perpetrators faced trial for their part in those crimes. * Judge Joanna Korner, former prosecution senior trial attorney, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 07/06/2019 * The Investigator is rife with demons. Vladimir Dzuro details his life as an international criminal investigator, and like many of his colleagues at the Yugoslav and Rwanda Tribunals, he witnessed the unfathomable daily. Skiils, teamwork, wit, and luck (bad and good) allowed him to squeeze justice out of profound depravity. Dzuro's book chronicles the real slog of international investigators and prosecutors. Hollywood fiction would shrink from his searing vies of war crimes from under the wet tarpaulin of a mass grave. Notwithstanding, Dzuro ponders his experience by observing that 'humanity owes it to the scarred and broken people who open up their hearts to you.' It is also true that the best international investigators, like Dzuro, open up their hearts, in turn. * Patricia Viseur Sellers, special advisor for gender to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court 07/06/2019 * The Investigator reminds us that the United Nations is a body that can, at will, search out and hold accountable those individuals who orchestrate and enforce extreme violence on noncombatants... Valdimir Dzuro's years of work with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia are a testament to the tenacity of persons dedicated to the investigations of war crimes. He and his colleagues deserve not only our admiration but more certainly our attention, as atrocities and genocide permeate the beginnings of the twenty-first century. Dzuro's narrative is fascinatingly clear and engaging; it also serves as a warning. * Ralph J. Hartley, adjunct professor of anthropology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln 07/06/2019 * The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia was an institution that should have never been needed in the twentieth century, but the internal conflict that erupted in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s precipitated large-scale war crimes committed by both civilian and military factions of the former Yugoslavian republics. The tribunal successfully identified and prosecuted war criminals from different sides of the conflict, which in turn brought at least some closure to those innocent victims who had suffered the most. * Kevin Curtis, chief investigations, UNICEF, and former investigator and team leader at the Office of the Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 07/06/2019 * Vladimir, in authoring this very powerful book The Investigator, has presented a message thar, in today's world, is essential reading. As history constantly demonstrates, mankind has learned nothing over the years and evil continues to prevail in splitting communities, who once live together harmoniously as neighbors. * Petr Ludwig, author of the bestselling book The End of Procrastination 07/06/2019 *


This was the most difficult war of all--a war between neighbors and friends, a war between people who had lived together in a functioning community for decades. We know that the physical wounds of war often heal faster than the psychological wounds. Bringing to justice those who perpetrated such heinous crimes will go far toward healing the psychological wounds. The efforts of Vladim r Dzuro and his colleagues did much to facilitate this healing process. --Jacques Paul Klein, former U.S. ambassador and former under-secretary-general of the United Nations-- (02/22/2019) The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia was an institution that should have never been needed in the twentieth century, but the internal conflict that erupted in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s precipitated large-scale war crimes committed by both civilian and military factions of the former Yugoslavian republics. The tribunal successfully identified and prosecuted war criminals from different sides of the conflict, which in turn brought at least some closure to those innocent victims who had suffered the most. --Kevin Curtis, chief of investigations, UNICEF, and former investigator and team leader at the Office of the Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia-- (02/22/2019) Personal accounts of investigations of war crimes, such as this one by Vladim r Dzuro, breathe life into the abstract project of accountability and show the challenges of operating a criminal justice system in an international environment. --Louise Arbour, United Nations special representative for international migration (2017-present) and chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (1996-99) --Louise Arbour (02/22/2019) The Investigator reminds us that the United Nations is a body that can, at will, search out and hold accountable those individuals who orchestrate and enforce extreme violence on noncombatants. . . . Vladim r Dzuro's years of work with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia are a testament to the tenacity of persons dedicated to the investigations of war crimes. He and his colleagues deserve not only our admiration but most certainly our attention, as atrocities and genocide permeate the beginnings of the twenty-first century. Dzuro's narrative is fascinatingly clear and engaging; it also serves as a warning. --Ralph J. Hartley, adjunct professor of anthropology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln -- (02/22/2019) For the war to really end, when the military conflict was over, the citizens of the former Yugoslavia needed closure that could only be provided by impartial justice. Our friend Vladim r Dzuro and his colleagues from the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia provided the only option. They put their own lives at risk so that others could have justice, and this book eloquently tells their story. --Ralph R. Johnson, U.S. ambassador to Sarajevo (1999-2001); and Lt. Col. Jacqueline M. Johnson, U.S. Army (Ret.), executive officer in the Office of the High Representative, Sarajevo (2000-2001) -- (02/22/2019) The Investigator is rife with demons. Vladimir Dzuro details his life as an international criminal investigator, and like many of his colleagues at the Yugoslav and Rwanda Tribunals, he witnessed the unfathomable daily. Skills, teamwork, wit, and luck (bad and good) allowed him to squeeze justice out of profound depravity. Dzuro's book chronicles the real slog of international investigators and prosecutors. Hollywood fiction would shrink from his searing view of war crimes from under the wet tarpaulin of a mass grave. Notwithstanding, Dzuro ponders his experience by observing that 'humanity owes it to the scarred and broken people who open up their hearts to you.' It is also true that the best international investigators, like Dzuro, open up their hearts, in turn. --Patricia Viseur Sellers, special advisor for gender to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court -- (02/22/2019) To my knowledge Vladim r Dzuro's book is the first to explain the complexities, the frustrations, and finally the satisfaction of conducting investigations into the serious crimes that were committed during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia. It is above all the story of the people who suffered from those crimes and the investigators and lawyers who worked tirelessly to try and ensure that the alleged perpetrators faced trial for their part in those crimes. --Judge Joanna Korner, former prosecution senior trial attorney, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia -- (02/22/2019) The Investigator is a fascinating story of a fight for truth and justice by bringing to trial in the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia the brutal murderers and assassins from the Balkans War. It is brilliant storytelling of this mass tragedy from a key investigator. --Philip Zimbardo, professor emeritus of psychology at Stanford University -- (02/22/2019) In a captivating personal account, Vladim r Dzuro brings to life the early days of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and describes in detail how its investigators and prosecutors worked against incredible odds to bring to justice some of the worst war criminals of the twentieth century. It is the story of the birth of the modern era of international justice and of how, despite expectations to the contrary, this undertaking became a success. --Clint Williamson, U.S. ambassador at large for war crimes issues (2006-9) -- (02/22/2019) This is a detective story with a difference. . . . The Investigator is a raw and unique firsthand account of an extraordinary pursuit of justice in the face of absolute horror. --Julian Borger, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and world affairs editor for the Guardian -- (02/22/2019)


The Investigator reminds us that the United Nations is a body that can, at will, search out and hold accountable those individuals who orchestrate and enforce extreme violence on noncombatants... Valdimir Dzuro's years of work with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia are a testament to the tenacity of persons dedicated to the investigations of war crimes. He and his colleagues deserve not only our admiration but more certainly our attention, as atrocities and genocide permeate the beginnings of the twenty-first century. Dzuro's narrative is fascinatingly clear and engaging; it also serves as a warning. * Ralph J. Hartley, adjunct professor of anthropology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln 07/06/2019 * Setting up the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was truly one of the most important cases I ever took to the Security Council. Despite the fact that people doubted it would work, it has been remarkable. The war was a tragedy and those involved needed to be punished. To this day, I say that the ICTY was essential-by assigning individual guilt we could expunge collective guilt. * Madeleine Albright, former United States Secretary of State, former Permanent Representative of the United States to the United Nations 07/06/2019 * Personal accounts of investigations of war crimes, such as this one by Vladimir Dzuro, breathe life into the abstract project of accountability and show the challenges of operating a criminal justice system in an international environment. * Louise Arbour, United Nations Special Representative for International Migration (2017-present) and chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (1996-99) * In a captivating personal account, Vladimir Dzuro brings to life the early days of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and describes in detail how its investigators and prosecutors worked against incredible odds to bring to justice some of the worst war criminals of the twentieth century. It is the story of the birth of the modern era of international justice and of how, despite expectations to the contrary, this undertaking became a success. * Clint Williamson, U.S. ambassador at large for war crimes issues (2006-9) 07/06/2019 * This was the most difficult war of all-a war between neighbors and friends, a war between people who had lived together in a functioning community for decades. We know that the physical wounds of war often heal faster than the psychological wounds. Bringing to justice those who perpetrated such heinous crimes will go far toward healing the psychological wounds. The efforts of Vladimir Dzuro and his colleagues did mich to facilitate this healing process. * Jacques Paul Klein, former U.S. ambassador and former under-secretary-general of the United Nations 07/06/2019 * To my knowledge Vladimir Dzuro's book is the first to explain the complexities, the frustrations, and finally the satisfaction of conducting investigations into the serious crimes that were committed during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia. It is above all the story of the people who suffered from those crimes and the investigators and lawyers who worked tirelessly to try and ensure tha the alleged perpetrators faced trial for their part in those crimes. * Judge Joanna Korner, former prosecution senior trial attorney, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 07/06/2019 * Vladimir, in authoring this very powerful book The Investigator, has presented a message thar, in today's world, is essential reading. As history constantly demonstrates, mankind has learned nothing over the years and evil continues to prevail in splitting communities, who once live together harmoniously as neighbors. * Petr Ludwig, author of the bestselling book The End of Procrastination 07/06/2019 * The Investigator is rife with demons. Vladimir Dzuro details his life as an international criminal investigator, and like many of his colleagues at the Yugoslav and Rwanda Tribunals, he witnessed the unfathomable daily. Skiils, teamwork, wit, and luck (bad and good) allowed him to squeeze justice out of profound depravity. Dzuro's book chronicles the real slog of international investigators and prosecutors. Hollywood fiction would shrink from his searing vies of war crimes from under the wet tarpaulin of a mass grave. Notwithstanding, Dzuro ponders his experience by observing that 'humanity owes it to the scarred and broken people who open up their hearts to you.' It is also true that the best international investigators, like Dzuro, open up their hearts, in turn. * Patricia Viseur Sellers, special advisor for gender to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court 07/06/2019 * The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia was an institution that should have never been needed in the twentieth century, but the internal conflict that erupted in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s precipitated large-scale war crimes committed by both civilian and military factions of the former Yugoslavian republics. The tribunal successfully identified and prosecuted war criminals from different sides of the conflict, which in turn brought at least some closure to those innocent victims who had suffered the most. * Kevin Curtis, chief investigations, UNICEF, and former investigator and team leader at the Office of the Prosecutor, International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia 07/06/2019 *


Author Information

Vladimír Dzuro worked as a criminal detective between 1983 and 1995, initially investigating violent crime with the Criminal Investigation Department in Prague and later at the National Central Bureau of Interpol in Prague. He currently works at the United Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services as chief of the New York Headquarters Office. Visit Dzuro’s website at warcrimeinvestigator.com.

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