Translations: Beograd
Case info
Personal info
- Regional centerBelgrade
- Who was attacked?Group
- Group members' names and surnamesBojana Jovanović and Jelena Radivojević
Media outlet
- Name of the media outletKRIK
- Type of media platformOnline Media
- Source of information about the incidentKRIK
Incident Data
- Date of incident14.10.2025
- CityBeograd
- Perpetrator(s)Not known
- Attacked byAuthorities - individuals
- Type of incidentOther threats to journalists
- Type of threatUnfounded judicial and administrative harassment including SLAPP cases
Action by the authorities
Action taken by the journalists' association
- Was journalist's association informed by the journalists directly?Yes
- What was the reaction of the journalists' association?The association reacted publicly
The association informed international organizations and institutions
The judge of the Appellate Court in Belgrade, Dušanka Đorđević, has filed a third lawsuit against the journalists from KRIK over their database “Prosudi ko sudi” (Judge Who Judges).
Judge Đorđević has filed a criminal lawsuit seeking a 10-month prison sentence and a two-year ban on practicing journalism for KRIK editor Bojana Jovanović and journalist Jelena Radivojević, accusing them of violating privacy rights. The proceedings for the first two lawsuits are ongoing, with KRIK editor Stevan Dojčinović and journalist Bojana Pavlović as defendants.
Judge Đorđević and her husband, lawyer Aleksandar Đorđević, filed the new lawsuit because, according to them, it was only during the court proceedings against KRIK that they discovered Jovanović and Radivojević’s involvement in the creation of the “Prosudi ko sudi” database. However, it was actually journalist Radivojević who had sent Judge Đorđević a request for an interview, along with specific questions, during the research and work on the judges’ database.
We point out that this lawsuit is yet another classic example of a SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) case—its purpose is not to seek justice but to pressure journalists, financially exhaust them, and intimidate them into ceasing their work on issues of significant public interest.