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CRIME

Everything you need to know about the Swedish murder case that’s stranger than fiction

Fraud, forgery, bribery, threats, drowning and stabbings: it's not the work of fiction, but the details that have now emerged from a high-profile Swedish murder case. The Local picks apart the key allegations from the complicated "summer cottage murder" case.

Everything you need to know about the Swedish murder case that's stranger than fiction
The summer cottage at the centre of a complicated Swedish murder case. Photo: TT

In brief…

A woman and her now ex boyfriend have been charged with the murder of her father and attempted murder of her mother in the summer of 2016, while the woman has also been charged with the murder of her then husband a year before in 2015.

Additionally, she has been charged with fraud, forgery of documents, bribery and threatening a public servant. If it sounds complicated, that's because it is. So let's take it in stages…

The suspects

At the centre of the case is a 42-year-old woman who ran her own business, has six children, is trained as a social worker and has no previous convictions.

Also involved is her boyfriend, a man from Afghanistan who came to Sweden as a lone refugee from Iran in the autumn of 2015, although his lawyer confirmed a day before the charges were pressed that the pair have broken up. Though the man claims to be 19, the prosecution believes that is not true and that he is actually 25. 

Both have been remanded in custody since last September over what has been called the “summer cottage murder” (sommarstugemorden). The name comes from the scene where the alleged violent crimes took place, a summer cottage in Arboga, central Sweden.

It was there in August 2016 that the woman's father was killed in a stabbing, while her mother was seriously injured. Her former husband, meanwhile, was found drowned near the same cottage a year before.

READ ALSO: Two dead in eastern Sweden 'murder mystery'

Police initially treated the drowning as an accident, but flags were raised by an insurance company for reasons that will be explained below, and a public prosecutor decided to begin a preliminary investigation into suspected murder.

In November 2016 the drowned man's grave was opened in order to carry out a comprehensive forensic examination. The woman has now been charged with the murder of her then husband, either alone or with additional help.

A further 25-year-old man was also remanded in custody for being involved in the murder of the husband, and though still officially a suspect, he is no longer detained.


An aerial image of the crime scene. Photo: Henrik Montgomery/TT

The additional charges

The violent crimes that allegedly took place around the summer cottage are not the only incidents in the case.

The fraud charge relates to the woman's attempts to take out money from a life insurance policy less than a month after her former husband died in 2015. When asked by the insurance company if there was any reason to suspect that the death had been caused by another person, she said no. The woman had taken out the policy in her husband’s name, with herself as the beneficiary.

It doesn't stop there: it is also alleged that while she was remanded in custody the woman twice attempted to bribe a prison officer with 5,000 kronor in order to allow her to post a letter without it first being examined – hence the bribery charge.

In police questioning meanwhile, the women threatened two interviewers with assault.

“I hope the hospital has bought extra wheelchairs because there are a lot of people who are going to have their knees broken after this, everyone who hurts me,” a police transcript of questioning quotes her as saying. For that she has now been charged with threatening public servants.


Prosecutors answering questions about the case. Photo: Henrik Montgomery/TT

The evidence

Evidence used in the investigation includes knives, the blade of the knife believed to have been used as the murder weapon in the killing of the father, and letters. A book with notes has also been examined, as have telephone logs and text messages.

Material linked to the woman's financial situation, and information about the woman being reported for a sexual offence in her company – for which her business partner expressed a desire to end their work together – has also been used by the prosecution.

Last February, prior to the trial and after being remanded in custody for almost half a year, the woman's boyfriend admitted that he had helped murder her father with a knife.

“She instructed and directed the 25-year-old,” according to prosecutor Jessica Wenna.

The man claims that during the summer of 2016 his girlfriend had attempted on several occasions to get him to murder her parents, to which he said no, but on the day that the murder took place he was under the influence of drugs. 

The female suspect, who is said to have transported her boyfriend to and from the summer cottage in a car and handed him the knife, has denied all charges.

Among the evidence used by the prosecution is an interview with the woman's mother, who survived the attack and not only witnessed it, but also gave details about her daughter's relationship with money and the circumstances around the scene of the crime.

There is also information from several of the female suspect's children that she asked them to cast suspicion on someone else as well as lie about several things.

If the prosecution cannot prove that the woman carried out the murder herself, they will push for her to be convicted of instigating or being complicit in the acts by encouraging the now 19-year-old man to carry out a crime.

The prosecution also says there is information to suggest her boyfriend has killed before, and they want him to be deported and banned from returning to Sweden if he is convicted.


A different angle of the crime scene. Photo: TT 

The motive

The prosecutors argue that the woman’s motive for carrying out the violent crimes was financial. It can be proven that she made a first attempt to have her husband killed in 2014, they claim, and sought the help of three different people to do so.

Her husband is said to have left her at the start of 2015 and told a different woman he was previously married to that the female suspect could not support herself through her own salary.

The 42-year-old had financial problems and had been supported economically by her parents for several years according to the prosecution, who noted that she had higher expenses than income and relied on money from her family to maintain her lifestyle.

The life insurance policy she took out for her husband was worth two million kronor ($226,900). 

The trial will be held at Västmanland district court and begin on May 8th.

CRIME

Top-ranking Syrian military official to face trial in Sweden

The highest-ranking Syrian military official ever to be tried in Europe was set to face court in Sweden on Monday.

Top-ranking Syrian military official to face trial in Sweden

Sixty-five-year-old former Syrian brigadier general Mohammed Hamo, who lives in Sweden, stands accused of “aiding and abetting” war crimes during Syria’s civil war, which can carry a sentence of life in jail.

The war in Syria between Bashar al-Assad’s regime and armed opposition groups, including the Islamic State, erupted after the government repressed peaceful pro-democracy protests in 2011.

It has killed more than half a million people, displaced millions, and ravaged the country’s economy and infrastructure.

According to the charge sheet, Hamo contributed – through “advice and action” – to the Syrian army’s warfare, “which systematically involved indiscriminate attacks on several towns or places in the area in and around the towns of Hama and Homs”.

The charges concern the period of January 1st to July 20th, 2012 and the trial is expected to last until late May.

Prosecutors say that the Syrian army’s “warfare has included widespread air and ground attacks by unknown perpetrators within the Syrian army”.

The prosecution argues that strikes were carried out without distinction – as required by international law – between civilian and military targets.

In his role as a brigadier general and head of an armament division, he allegedly helped with the coordination and supply of arms to units, enabling the carrying out of orders on an “operational level”.

Hamo’s lawyer, Mari Kilman, told AFP that her client denied committing a crime but said she did not wish to comment further ahead of the trial.

Several plaintiffs are due to testify at the trial, including Syrians from the cities in question and a British photographer who was injured during one of the strikes.

‘Complete impunity’

“The attacks in and around Homs and Hama in 2012 resulted in widespread civilian harm and an immense destruction of civilian properties,” Aida Samani, senior legal advisor at rights group Civil Rights Defenders, told AFP.

“The same conduct has been repeated systematically by the Syrian army in other cities across Syria with complete impunity,” she continued.

This trial will be the first in Europe “to address these types of indiscriminate attacks by the Syrian army”, according to Samani, who added that it “will be the first opportunity for victims of the attacks to have their voices heard in an independent court”.

Hamo is the highest-ranking military official to actually go on trial in Europe, but other European countries have also tried to bring charges against even more senior members.

In March, Swiss prosecutors charged Rifaat al-Assad, an uncle of president Bashar al-Assad, with war crimes and crimes against humanity.

However, it remains unlikely Rifaat al-Assad – who recently returned to Syria after 37 years in exile – will show up in person for the trial, for which a date has yet to be set.

Swiss law allows for trials in absentia under certain conditions.

Last November, France issued an international arrest warrant for Bashar al-Assad himself, who stands accused of complicity in crimes against humanity and war crimes over chemical attacks in 2013.

Three other international warrants were also issued for the arrests of Bashar al-Assad’s brother Maher, the de-facto chief of the Fourth Division – an elite military unit of the Syrian army – and two generals.

In January of 2022, a German court sentenced former Syrian colonel Anwar Raslan to life in jail for crimes against humanity in the first global trial over state-sponsored torture in Syria, which was hailed by victims as a victory for justice.

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