«Serbia holds 'death squad' trial». BBC News (på engelsk). 20. desember 2005. Besøkt 2. september 2019. «After the gunmen in the video had been identified and tracked down, it was broadcast on TV news bulletins across the former Yugoslavia and beyond.»
«Jail for Serb video death squad». BBC News (på engelsk). 10. april 2007. Besøkt 2. september 2019. «It was also the biggest war crimes trial of Serbs by Serbs to date. ...But relatives of the victims expressed disappointment that the maximum sentences - of 40 years - had not been handed down.»
Dobbs, Michael. «'It helped to be a psychopath'». Foreign Policy (på engelsk). Besøkt 2. september 2019. «Although Medic considered himself a Serb “patriot,” his true motivations appear to have been much more mundane. Like many leaders of paramilitary gangs, he viewed the war as an opportunity to enrich himself. .. "He’s filthy rich and it all came from the war, from State Security turning a blind eye to his clandestine businesses." …. Medic did not directly participate in the killing of the six Srebrenica Muslims, who included three minors under the age of eighteen. As the investigation later established, the murders were carried out by his personal bodyguards, led by his cousin, Branislav Medic»
Wood, Nicholas (11. april 2007). «4 Serbs Guilty in Execution of 6 Bosnians». The New York Times (på engelsk). ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 2. september 2019. «The judge imposed 20-year sentences on Slobodan Medic, the commander of the unit, and his assistant, Branislav Medic. The only defendant to plead guilty, Pera Petrasavic, was given a sentence of 13 years, and another, Aleksander Medic, received a five-year term. ... The video was first shown in June 2005 during the trial of the former Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague. The tape was regarded as a watershed within Serbia because it confronted Serbs with firsthand evidence of the involvement of their security forces in Bosnian killings. Until then, most Serbs did not believe that the massacre had taken place.»
Savic, Misha (21. desember 2005). «Serb commander shows no remorse for videotaped killings». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 2. september 2019. «the judge began questioning them, starting with Slobodan Medic, the commander of the dreaded Serb "Scorpions" paramilitary unit. He showed no remorse during his opening comments, when he made the remark about how he would have killing the Serb soldier who did the filming. … "The footage is now at the centre of attention but back then it was irrelevant. Now it can cost me my freedom."»
Wood, Nicholas (11. april 2007). «4 Serbs Guilty in Execution of 6 Bosnians». The New York Times (på engelsk). ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 2. september 2019. «The judge imposed 20-year sentences on Slobodan Medic, the commander of the unit, and his assistant, Branislav Medic. The only defendant to plead guilty, Pera Petrasavic, was given a sentence of 13 years, and another, Aleksander Medic, received a five-year term. ... The video was first shown in June 2005 during the trial of the former Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in The Hague. The tape was regarded as a watershed within Serbia because it confronted Serbs with firsthand evidence of the involvement of their security forces in Bosnian killings. Until then, most Serbs did not believe that the massacre had taken place.»
Savic, Misha (21. desember 2005). «Serb commander shows no remorse for videotaped killings». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 2. september 2019. «the judge began questioning them, starting with Slobodan Medic, the commander of the dreaded Serb "Scorpions" paramilitary unit. He showed no remorse during his opening comments, when he made the remark about how he would have killing the Serb soldier who did the filming. … "The footage is now at the centre of attention but back then it was irrelevant. Now it can cost me my freedom."»