The court said in a statement that its ruling was based on the Law on Criminal Procedure and that it could be appealed in the next two days.
The Osijek County Court today again discussed placing the indictees in custody after the Supreme Court on April 27 quashed the county court's decision of April 16 to set detention for Glavas and extend detention for the six other indictees - Ivica Krnjak, Gordana Getos Magdic, Mirko Sivic, Dino Kontic, Tihomir Valentic, and Zdravko Dragic - which the county Prosecutor's Office proposed after the seven were indicted.
The Supreme Court assessed that the appeals lodged by Glavas, Krnjak, Valentic and Dragic were founded, quashed the County Court's decision and ordered it to make a new one.
The Supreme Court at the time rejected Glavas's objection that as an MP he was placed in custody without the parliament's previous decision, saying that enclosed with the case file was a report by the parliamentary Credentials and Privileges Commission approving detention and the launching of criminal proceedings over founded suspicion that he committed war crimes.