Law professors Gordan Kalajdziev asked the warden of the Sutka prison to explain how is it possible that disgracd Special Prosecutor Katica Janeva has access to a computer while being detained.

Janeva sent out two orders to her Special Prosecutor’s Office from prison, ordering them to hand over all their case files to the OJO/PPO office of state prosecutors, effectively attempting to shut down her office, and also submitted a resignation. Kalajdziev, who is a former supporter of the Colored Revolution that rallied around Janeva but was also a likely candidate to take her place in 2015, says that the letters were partially written on a computer.

Who gave Janeva this printed letter? Who is visiting her? Everything is being recorded. Warden Esad Rahic needs to answer some questions. We need a Parliament Committee to investigate all of this. How can she have a computer while in prison? All of this stinks, Kalajdziev said.

Rahic is a former official of the ruling SDSM party and his daughter was hired by Janeva in her SPO office, which prompted expectations that he will give her the royal treatment in prison, but her actions are seen as going beyond that. Many legal experts have objected to Janeva’s letters, saying that a person detained for abusing her office can’t be allowed to continue running such a vital institution.