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Swede acquitted in landmark S&M trial

The Svea Court of Appeal (Hovrätten) on Wednesday acquitted a 33-year-old man charged with assault after violent sex with a teenager, in a case testing the limits of sexual violence permitted in Sweden between consenting partners.

Swede acquitted in landmark S&M trial

The teenage girl had been beaten severely with a wooden stick and a ruler against buttocks, thighs and genitals.

The man was previously acquitted as the girl had consented to the sexual role play.

But the prosecutor argued that it’s not possible to consent to aggravated assault and therefore appealed the verdict.

Although the court found it beyond doubt that the teen had been assaulted by the man, it also judged that the girl had consented to the violence, based on evidence given by the man.

During the trial, the girl partly denied having given her consent, but the court judged her testimony as only having ”limited credence”.

The girl’s defence lawyer, Kerstin Hedelin, told news agency TT that the her client’s self-harming behaviour in the past should have been considered.

”It is important that one actually see her as the very vulnerable girl that she was,” she said to TT.

Hedelin also refers to research that shows that it’s not uncommon for girls with self-harming behaviour to let themselves be sexually abused as another way of harming themselves.

”When cutting yourself doesn’t have the same effect any more they revert to this,” she said.

Prosecutor Ulrika Rogland told TT that she had hoped for a more conclusive ruling. According to her, the court brushed aside the complications of the particular case.

”They discuss the case as if it is a question of two equal partners and as if he basically just did what she wanted. They ignore the problem that she was much younger, that they had never met before, and that the situation perhaps required more from the adult,” she told TT.

She added that although the court mentions the girl’s self harming behaviour, they miss how ”severe” it was.

In the earlier trial she was not present but in the appeals court she appeared and showed the court the scars she had from where she had cut herself.

The defence lawyer of the 33-year-old, Bo Petersson, told TT that this means the court of appeal has ruled that it’s acceptable to practice this kind of sexuality.

According to Petersson, what went on between his client and the girl falls within what is generally characterised as ”normal BDSM-sex”. On the condition, he added, that there is consent.

But Petersson doesn’t think that the case will set a precedent for the limitations of violent sexual behaviour in court.

”In some way it seems self evident that those with this inclination to practice their sexuality even if it means bumps and bruises,” he said to TT.

When it comes to assault the ruling says that it is ”normally not a criminal offence to administer pain or modest injury with the consent of the other”. The violence the man put the girl through is therefore not deemed indefensible.

As the man was acquitted, the girl will not be paid any damages. The court was unanimous in its decision.

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TEEN

Norway mum charged for teen’s starving death

A 13-year-old girl who was found dead on New Year’s Eve in a cottage in Beitostølen most likely died from emaciation, according to an autopsy report.

Norway mum charged for teen's starving death
Police investigate the cottage where a 13-year-old girl was found dead. Photo: Håkon Mosvold Larsen / NTB scanpix
The girl’s mother is being charged with gross neglect resulting in death and for failing to help her daughter. According to police, the mother’s negligent care has been going on for quite some time. 
 
“Public Health cannot come up with a definite cause of death yet, but it is likely that the death is related to emaciation,” police prosecutor Julie Dalsveen from the Innlandet precinct said at a press conference in Gjøvik on Monday afternoon. 
 
Several media outlets have spoken with family acquaintances who said that the girl struggled with an eating disorder. Central to the police investigation is determining the extent to which the girl's health problems were noticed by public authorities. 
 
“The essential thing for police now is to clarify why the girl died and whether anything could have been done differently in order to avoid the death,” Dalsveen said. 
 
The girl and her mother were originally from Bærum but moved into the family cottage at Beitostolen in the autumn. A new address was reported to the National Register on November 4th, but just twelve days later the girl’s mother submitted a new change of address – this time to Oslo. 
 
Mother arrested
After the teenager was found dead on New Year’s Eve, the mother was taken in by the national health service. On Monday, she was released from hospital and then arrested and put in police custody in Oslo. 
 
Police believe that the mother’s neglect of the child had been going on for quite some time before the 13-year-old’s death. 
 
The mother’s lawyer, Håvard Fremstad, told broadcaster NRK that he was surprised that his client was released from hospital. 
 
“I had a conversation with her earlier today. To me, she seemed ill. She was not able to talk to me about the case,” Fremstad said. 
 
He said that he was unable to discuss the daughter’s death because the mother seemed too ill to communicate. 
 
The Chief County Medical Officer in Oppland is attempting to find out what happened to the 13-year-old, VG reported. 
 
“We became familiar with the matter through the media and we are going to file an inspection order to gain insight into the case. Our first step is to contact the municipality,” medical officer Erlend Assland said, adding that there was no record of the case before the girl’s death. 
 
Child Protection Service involved
Councilman Øyvind Langseth from Øystre Slidre Municipality confirmed that the circumstances surrounding the case led the municipality to send a worried message to Child Protection Service (Barnevernet – CPS) in November after the mother reported the move to Oslo. 
 
Police were asked to assist in finding out if anyone lived in the cottage. An officer drove to the location but could not see from the road if anyone was there and turned his vehicle around and reported back to CPS. 
 
Dalsveen said that there was no information at that time to indicate that the police should take action, but she added that this is one of the things that will be clarified by the ensuing investigation.