A Jacksonville, Florida man was sentenced today to 18 months
in prison for unlawfully procuring U.S. citizenship by failing to disclose
during his naturalization process his membership in the Bosnian Army and crimes
that he committed in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Bosnian Conflict in the
1990s, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Blanco of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division and Acting U.S. Attorney W. Stephen
Muldrow of the Middle District of Florida.
Slobo Maric, 56, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge
Marcia Morales Howard of the Middle District of Florida who also ordered his
U.S. citizenship revoked. On July 18,
2016, Maric pleaded guilty before U.S. Magistrate Judge James R. Klindt of the
Middle District of Florida to one count of unlawful procurement of
naturalization.
According to the plea agreement, in 1993, Maric served as a
shift leader, the second in command to the warden, of a detention facility in
Bosnia that housed captured Bosnian-Croat soldiers. Many of the guards in the facility routinely
subjected detainees to serious physical abuse and humiliation. According to the plea agreement, Maric
selected detainees for other guards to abuse; directly participated in abusing
several prisoners; and sent prisoners on dangerous and deadly work details on
the front line of the conflict. The
Bosnian government charged Maric for his criminal conduct and, after Maric
immigrated to the United States, Bosnia indicted and convicted Maric in
absentia for war crimes against prisoners.
According to the plea agreement, Maric knew about the Bosnian court
proceedings, yet he failed to disclose the proceedings and lied about his
conduct on his application for U.S. citizenship. Maric became a naturalized U.S. citizen on
Oct. 31, 2002.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland
Security Investigations (HSI) Jacksonville Field Office investigated the case
under the supervision of the HSI Tampa Field Office with support from ICE’s
Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Center.
Trial Attorney Clayton O’Connor and Historian David Rich of
the Criminal Division’s Human Rights and Special Prosecutions Section (HRSP)
and Assistant U.S. Attorney Dale Campion of the Middle District of Florida
prosecuted the case.
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