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16 years for man who killed girl ‘by mistake’

The 37-year-old man from the Växjö area who claimed he accidentally killed a 17-year-old girl, called “Johanna” in the Swedish press, from southern Sweden during a sex act "that went too far” was sentenced to 16 years in prison on Tuesday.

“It’s both a good and a bad result,” defence lawyer Leif Silbersky summed up the verdict to news agency TT.

In February the man had been charged with murder and disturbing the peace of the dead, as well as with child rape in connection with a separate incident from 2007.

On Tuesday, the 37-year-old was convicted of murder and disturbing the peace of the dead, but the rape charges were dismissed.

Also, Silbersky noted, the man was sentenced to 16 years in prison where the prosecution has argued for a life sentence.

“I guess I am happy that he did get convicted of murder and disturbing the peace of the dead, considering his claims that it was accident,” Yvonne Rudinsson of the prosecution told TT.

The 17-year-old Johanna was found dead in a wooded area outside Lindshammar in southeastern Sweden after a major police operation in August last year.

Johanna and the man had made contact via the internet, she wanted to be a model and he claimed to be a photographer.

The contents of the man’s computer also provided evidence that he had had contact with a large number of women and that in several cases, he had pretended to represent a fashion company and wanted to take pictures.

After the forensic investigation was carried out, investigators concluded that Johanna had been strangled to death in the 37-year-old’s apartment and then dumped in the woods.

The man maintained that Johanna’s death was accidental and occurred in connection with a sex act that went too far.

But the district court completely rejected the explanation given by the 37-year old that he had placed a noose made out of an electrical lead around Johanna’s neck while having consensual sex.

Instead they supported the prosecutor’s theory that the man strangled the girl with his bare hands. In order to kill her he must have held on for at least three minutes, which made the court conclude that he intended to take her life.

The motive was believed to be jealousy and the man was said to have shown a strong inclination to exert his control over the girl.

Scratches on the 37-year-old’s arms and skin fragments under the victim’s nails also indicate that she had tried to fight him off and defend herself.

According to the verdict, the man is to pay around 165,000 kronor ($26,600) to the girl’s relatives. The two plaintiffs in the rape case get nothing as the man was acquitted of those charges.

The court didn’t think that the murder had been of such cruelty to warrant a life sentence. But neither were there any extenuating circumstances, and therefore the sentenced him to 16 years in prison.

“It takes a lot before someone is sentenced to life, but I would have thought this case met the requirements. I want to look into why they chose to limit the sentence to 16 years,” Rudinsson said to TT.

According to defence lawyer Leif Silbersky, there is a chance the man will appeal the verdict.

“I will now spend next week analysing the verdict and decide whether we will appeal or not. But right now, much points to an appeal,“ defence lawyer Leif Silbersky told TT.

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MODEL

L’Oreal drops trans model over controversial comments

French cosmetics giant L'Oreal on Friday confirmed it had dropped a British transgender model over comments the company deemed "at odds with our values," after she was hired as part of a diversity campaign.

L'Oreal drops trans model over controversial comments
File photo: AFP

“L'Oreal champions diversity,” the beauty brand said on Twitter. “Comments by Munroe Bergdorf are at odds with our values and so we have decided to end our partnership with her”.

L'Oreal had tapped Bergdorf — a 29-year-old model, DJ and trans activist whose father is Jamaican — as one of the five newest faces of its #allworthit campaign to introduce the five new shades of its True Match face makeup.

The foundation make-up boasts 28 unique shades ranging from very light to dark brown in a bid to match the myriad different skin tones and textures of people worldwide.

According to British Vogue, Bergdorf was the first transgender woman to be featured in a L'Oreal Paris UK campaign.

But controversy erupted when Bergdorf took to Facebook in a now-deleted post to react to events in the US city of Charlottesville, where a woman was killed on August 12th after an avowed white supremacist rammed his car into a group of anti-racism counter-protesters.

“Honestly I don't have energy to talk about the racial violence of white people any more. Yes ALL white people,” Bergdorf wrote, according to copies posted in British media.

“Once white people begin to admit that their race is the most violent and oppressive force of nature on Earth… then we can talk,” the model reportedly wrote.

L'Oreal told British media it “remains committed to celebrating diversity and breaking down barriers in beauty”.

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