The web site with the address www.domagojmargetic.com has been closed and removed from the Internet, the spokesman told Hina.
Acting on the judge's order, the Zagreb crime police also searched the computer and its components as well as the medium for the storage of data in the digital form which two Croatian citizens possess and use, but Mehun declined to reveal the name of those two persons.
The police operation was carried out at two locations.
Asked whether Domagoj Margetic's flat was searched alongside the computer, Mehun answered that the search of the computer also required a warrant for the search of the facilities where the computer was placed. However, this did not refer to Margetic but to another two Croatian citizens and two locations in the Republic of Croatia," the spokesman explained, giving no other information.
Although the court banned him from publicly presenting a testimony a protected witness had given at the trial of Bosnian Croat Tihomir Blasic before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), Margetic published the testimony in question on his web site on Wednesday evening. The protected witness is the current Croatian President Stjepan Mesic, who gave the testimony while he was an opposition politician.
On Thursday morning it was reported that President Mesic had accepted a proposal by Prime Minister Ivo Sanader that the Hague war crimes tribunal should be requested to declassify the president's protected testimony before the tribunal and make it available to the public.