 You and judges have convicted two men of war crimes for their role in financing and equipping Serb militias during the break-up of the former Yugoslavia in the final case before the court dating from the Balkan Wars of the 1990s. In a summary of the judgment provided by the court, judges convicted the former head of Serbia's State Security Service, Joviko Stanislik, and his subordinate, Franco Franky Simatovic, and handed them 12-year sentences. The men entered court custody in 2003 and were acquitted in an initial trial in 2013, but appeals judges ordered a retrial in 2015. Having considered all relevant factors, the trial chamber sentences Joviko Stanislik to single-seism imprisonment and Franco Simatovic to a single sentence of 12 years of imprisonment. The trial chamber is satisfied that the accused provided practical assistance, which had a still effect on the commission of the crimes of murder, forcible displacement, and persecution committed in Bosaamac and were aware that their acts assisted in their commission. Accordingly, the chamber finds them currently responsible for aiding and abetting the commission of the crimes in Bosaamac. The trial chamber does not find the accused responsible for planning, ordering, or abetting any other charged crime.