Since 1990, Radonjić had already spent a sizeable amount of time in Serbia, mostly dividing his time between
Belgrade where he owned a night club named Lotos in Zmaj Jovina Street and
Mount Zlatibor where he owned a casino named Palisade and where he also later built a casino named Club Boss.
1999 arrest in Miami Though based in the Balkans, Radonjić frequently travelled abroad, especially to
Caribbean and
South American destinations. During one such trip in late December 1999 after almost a decade spent in the former
Yugoslavia, Radonjić was arrested by U.S. custom officials in
Miami, Florida. He had been flagged by a customs agent who ran variations of his name and found a warrant from federal court in the New York borough of Brooklyn. He had been indicted in 1992 for giving a $60,000 bribe to a juror in the 1987 racketeering murder trial of
John Gotti, and thus was held without bail as a wanted fugitive. The charges against Radonjić were dropped after the key witness in his case, Gravano, was arrested for drug related offenses. Gravano had been the Gambinos' intermediary between Radonjić and the corrupt juror, Pape. However, the case against Radonjić was based almost entirely on Gravano's testimony, and Gravano's arrest made prosecutors believe his testimony would not be credible. Radonjić was freed in March 2001. He immediately left the United States and went back to the former Yugoslavia. In subsequent interviews Radonjić claimed the FBI had ulterior motives for persecuting and harassing him: During spring 2003, following the
assassination of Serbian Prime Minister
Zoran Đinđić, Radonjić was arrested and questioned as part of
Operation Sablja, a wide-sweeping police action initiated by the Serbian authorities under the state of emergency. After spending three days in prison, Radonjić was released. He died following a brief illness in
Belgrade, Serbia on 31 March 2011. ==In popular culture==