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ANKARA: Hrant Dink Murder Suspect Referred To Court

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  • ANKARA: Hrant Dink Murder Suspect Referred To Court

    HRANT DINK MURDER SUSPECT REFERRED TO COURT

    www.worldbulletin.net, Turkey
    Oct 24 2013

    Erhan Tuncel was referred to İstanbul's Caglayan Court on Thursday.

    Erhan Tuncel, who was previously acquitted of all charges related
    to the 2007 killing of Hrant Dink, the late editor-in-chief of the
    Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, was referred to İstanbul's Caglayan
    Court on Thursday.

    The İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court, which has started a retrial
    in the Dink investigation, issued an arrest warrant for Tuncel last
    month and he was detained by police on Wednesday.

    The İstanbul court launched the retrial of the Dink probe after
    the Supreme Court of Appeals in May overturned the İstanbul court's
    ruling of Jan. 17, 2012, in which it dismissed the involvement of an
    organized criminal network in the murder.

    Tuncel, who worked as an informant for the Trabzon Police Department,
    was sentenced to 10 years in prison for his role in the 2004 bombing
    of a McDonald's restaurant in the Black Sea town of Trabzon but
    was acquitted of all charges regarding the Dink murder, including
    prosecutors' claims in the first trial that he was the one who ordered
    Yasin Hayal, the man who was given a life sentence for soliciting
    Dink's shooter, to murder him.

    Dink's lawyers earlier said the Supreme Court of Appeals' 9th Criminal
    Chamber had indicated in its May decision that Tuncel may have played
    a crucial role in the murder of Dink.

    Hayal and Tuncel, along with all other defendants, were cleared
    of charges of membership in a terrorist organization in the local
    court's ruling.

    Dink was shot and killed in broad daylight on Jan. 19, 2007, by an
    ultranationalist teenager outside the offices of his newspaper in
    İstanbul. Evidence discovered since then has led to claims that the
    murder was linked to the "deep state," a term used in reference to
    a shady group of military and civilian bureaucrats believed to have
    links to criminal elements.

    The next hearing of the case will be on Dec. 3.

    In an interview with the Star daily on Wednesday, Tuncel said his
    arrest warrant was illegal and blamed the gendarmerie for having a
    "big role" in the murder of the Armenian journalist.

    Cihan



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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