The All American Notorious Men
Sulkević was sentenced to two years of prison, with a claim that the man had told him that Albada tried to kill him and forgive him "this time." Sulkević was transferred to Belgrade Prison, where he underwent periods of beatings, until he was finally sentenced to four years imprisonment in November 1963 and was imprisoned in Belgrade Prison until 1974. Despite staying in custody, the son of Goran Trescínković, a political prisoner who convicted him of Communism for organizing a bombing of Belgrade police stations in April 1939, was released on 10 April 1974. By the time the serial was released he was living in the former communist country as his mother. The All American Notorious Men is a 1934 American thriller film directed by William H. Rush and starring Jean Harlow and William Howard as the Americans.