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THOMAS QUICK

New acquittal for convicted serial killer

A Swedish man, long considered to be the most dangerous serial killer in Scandinavia, was acquitted on Friday of the 1988 murder of a nine-year-old Norwegian girl.

New acquittal for convicted serial killer

Sture Bergwall, formerly known as Thomas Quick, was granted a re-trial in March for the murder of Therese Johannesen, but the case against him was dropped, due to a lack of evidence, effectively acquitting him. Johannesen’s body has never been found.

Bergwall is serving a life sentence in a psychiatric institution after being convicted of eight murders carried out between 1976 and 1988. At the time he confessed to all of them, plus another 20 or so allegedly committed in Sweden, Norway and Finland.

The murders were especially gruesome, and in more than one case he claimed he had eaten parts of his victims bodies.

However, in 2008 he suddenly withdrew all his confessions, saying he had been attention seeking at the time and had been under heavy medication. This gave rise to many questions over his involvement, because in all cases there was little or no evidence other than his confessions.

It is not the first time Bergwall has been acquitted of a crime. He was granted a re-trial for the 1988 murder of Israeli tourist Yenon Levi and his conviction was quashed last September.

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ITALY

French police snare ‘Valentine’s Day Monster’

An Italian serial killer nicknamed the "Valentine's Day monster", whose escape from prison in Genoa this week triggered a huge manhunt, was caught Friday on the French Riviera, police said.

French police snare 'Valentine's Day Monster'
French police snared an Italian serial kiler on Friday on the Riviera coast. Photo: AFP

Bartolomeo Gagliano went on a murder spree in the 1980s, killing two prostitutes and a transvestite and seriously injuring another sex worker, for which he served years in a criminal psychiatric ward.

At the time of his escape on Wednesday, he had been serving time in prison in the northwestern Italian town of Genoa for a hold-up.

French police said he was detained on Friday afternoon in the southeastern French city of Menton after Italian authorities launched a manhunt for a man they described as "very dangerous" and "possibly armed".

Gagliano was spotted in Ventimiglia, an Italian border town, and fled on the motorway to France in a stolen vehicle.

Police found the parked car in Menton, and detained him as he was heading back to the vehicle.

Gagliano escaped while on temporary leave from prison to visit his mother – leave he had been granted for good behaviour. 

Italian media gave him the nickname of "Valentine's Day monster" because he killed the transvestite on the day that celebrates love.

According to Italy's ANSA news agency, Gagliano had also been convicted for robbery, drugs and weapons possession, aggression and extortion.

He had already escaped from a psychiatric hospital in northern Italy in 1990, and a month later shot his girlfriend in the chin and fled the scene, the agency said.

She was found lying nude on a bed, with underwear at her neck to try to stop the bleeding, surrounded by pornographic material, it added. Gagliano later returned to the hospital.

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