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Stockholm cop charged over ‘cowboy’ shootout

Criminal charges were filed on Tuesday against a Stockholm police officer who shot wildly at a gang of thieves as they attempted to flee after robbing a jewellery shop in March. It later emerged that the thieves never filed a single shot.

Stockholm cop charged over 'cowboy' shootout

The officer was charged with reckless endangerment for his actions in the incident which resulted in ten shots being fired into the Metropolis gym on Birger Jarlsgatan while several innocent bystanders looked on in horror.

“The reception area was shot to pieces. Right where we were standing, three or four shots came in,” Pernilla Gunnskog, a personal trainer who worked at the gym, told the TT news agency.

Gunnskog and two colleagues were standing at the gym’s reception desk on March 6th of this year when they heard a loud bang.

“I pulled the other girls to the floor. It was a survival instinct. Then things started popping like crazy. Pieces of bananas from our fruit bowl were flying and so were pieces from the wall. My first thought was that someone was on their way into the gym to shoot us,” she said.

All told, the incident resulted in 18 shots being fired by police, who where later criticized for acting like “American cowboys”.

On Tuesday, a 33-year-old officer who fired 12 shots – ten of which went into the gym – was charged with reckless endangerment.

According to the indictment, his actions put the lives of the women in the gym at risk.

“The women were in the line of fire. They would have been hit if they had remained standing where they were first standing,” prosecutor Håkan Roswall told TT.

The three robbers, who were later sentenced to prison, didn’t have real weapons, but had instead pointed a starting pistol at police, who then responded with live fire.

The attorney for the officer who has been charged told TT that his client denies committing any crime.

“A robber pointed his weapon straight at him. He has the right to defend himself and his colleagues,” said defence attorney Peter Althin to TT.

According to Althing, the 33-year-old officer didn’t realize there was a gym behind the robbers or that there were people inside.

Included in the evidence are film clips recorded by other witnesses to the shooting. The prosecutor intends to show that the officer who has been charged could have taken cover behind parked cars.

TT/The Local/dl

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STOCKHOLM

Stockholm Pride is a little different this year: here’s what you need to know 

This week marks the beginning of Pride festivities in the Swedish capital. The tickets sold out immediately, for the partly in-person, partly digital events. 

Pride parade 2019
There won't be a Pride parade like the one in 2019 on the streets of Stockholm this year. Photo: Stina Stjernkvist/TT

You might have noticed rainbow flags popping up on major buildings in Stockholm, and on buses and trams. Sweden has more Pride festivals per capita than any other country and is the largest Pride celebration in the Nordic region, but the Stockholm event is by far the biggest.  

The Pride Parade, which usually attracts around 50,000 participants in a normal year, will be broadcast digitally from Södra Teatern on August 7th on Stockholm Pride’s website and social media. The two-hour broadcast will be led by tenor and debater Rickard Söderberg.

The two major venues of the festival are Pride House, located this year at the Clarion Hotel Stockholm at Skanstull in Södermalm, and Pride Stage, which is at Södra Teatern near Slussen.

“We are super happy with the layout and think it feels good for us as an organisation to slowly return to normal. There are so many who have longed for it,” chairperson of Stockholm Pride, Vix Herjeryd, told the Dagens Nyheter newspaper.

Tickets are required for all indoor events at Södra Teatern to limit the number of people indoors according to pandemic restrictions. But the entire stage programme will also be streamed on a big screen open air on Mosebacketerassen, which doesn’t require a ticket.  

You can read more about this year’s Pride programme on the Stockholm Pride website (in Swedish). 

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