In November 2010, Croatian President Ivo Josipović laid a wreath at the graveyard of the massacre victims and officially apologized for the killings.
Nineteen people, eighteen Serbs and one Hungarian national, were detained in the house of a local man called Andrija Bukvić.
[9] According to police investigators, the troops became enraged after a Croatian soldier was killed by a Serb sniper in a nearby village.
Ten Croatian soldiers are said to have burst into the Bukvić house and murdered all of the detained individuals before destroying the home.
[9] The village of Paulin Dvor and its surroundings were seized by Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) units and Serb paramilitaries soon afterwards.
[12] In November 2010, Croatian President Ivo Josipović laid a wreath at the graveyard of the massacre victims.