Following the completed procedures, Ewa Stankiewicz-Jorgensen told a TV Republika reporter that three officers had searched the apartment where she was staying. Six additional officers searched apartments at two other locations.
“Nine military policemen raided me and my husband,”
said the journalist, adding that her husband, Glenn Jorgensen, is currently travelling.
Commenting immediately after the gendarmes left her apartment, she recounted the course of events, which began at 6 a.m.
She admitted that she was stunned by the situation and, having been pulled out of bed by the military personnel, initially called lawyers for consultation.
“They behaved quite politely. They searched everywhere. They inspected my husband’s room very thoroughly,” Stankiewicz-Jorgensen emphasized. Initially, she thought the search was related to parts from the twin TU-154 aircraft that had been under examination. However, it turned out that the officers were looking for parts of the wreckage of aircraft No. 101, which carried the 96 victims of the attack.
She acknowledged that the searches were not yet over.
“I am to go to another location and open the basement for them,” she added. She confirmed that the protocol recorded that nothing had been found.
The journalist also received a summons for questioning at the National Prosecutor’s Office on March 11 of this year.